Daniel Domelevo, former Auditor General and member of the Operation Recover All Loot (ORAL) Committee, has fired back at critics, stating that those who believe the committee is acting unlawfully should take their grievances to court. Apexnewsgh reports Speaking on Joy News’ Upfront, Domelevo maintained that ORAL’s activities are lawful and straightforward, focused solely on collecting data to assist the executive. “We’re not overstepping our mandate or infringing on other anti-corruption agencies,” Domelevo emphasized. “We’re simply collecting information from those who voluntarily come forward, as requested by the president-elect’s office.” He noted that the committee’s work is entirely voluntary and aimed at supporting the executive in making informed decisions about corruption-related cases. Domelevo attributed the backlash to fear and hypocrisy, pointing out that similar initiatives have been perceived differently in the past. “In 2017, the senior minister announced that foreign firms would be engaged to collect data and investigate. It was fine back then, but now a simple team collecting data is a problem. That’s the hypocrisy we have in this country,” he said. He also humorously highlighted the importance of clarity in legal matters, saying, “Until something is prohibited by law, it’s lawful. Otherwise, one day you’ll say I’m being unlawful for wearing a smock into the studio.” Domelevo encouraged critics to channel their concerns through appropriate legal avenues instead of resorting to baseless accusations. “If we’re working unlawfully, go to court. Until then, we’ll continue doing what we’re doing – lawfully and transparently.” Source: Apexnewsgh.com
People funded ‘personal economic recovery progs.’ with COVID funds; do value-for-money audit – Domelevo
Former Auditor-General Daniel Domelevo has suggested there be an independent audit of all COVID-19 expenses made by the government. The anti-graft campaigner today, Wednesday, 13 October 2021, delivered a lecture at the Ghana Institute of Management and Public Administration (GIMPA) at which he noted that although the government has good intentions of protecting the citizens, some individuals may have taken advantage of the situation to stash their pockets with COVID funds in the heat of the fight against the pandemic. Responding to a question asked by Class91.3FM’s Blessed Sogah, Mr Domelevo said: “COVID actually provided grounds for a lot of expenditure in the public sector and Ghana is not alone, it is all over the world; there have been quick mobilisation of public resources to address the challenges posed by COVID and in the process, people also have found ways of funding their personal economic recovery programmes at the expense of the public”. He said: “I’ll recommend that we do what we refer to as value-for-money or performance audit to arrive at or to determine how our resources were used; if they were used for the intended purposes, what are some of the challenges and what are the recommendations or business continuity plan so that in case another disaster or pandemic happens – perish my thoughts; I’m not saying we should expect another one but just in case another should happen – we’ll know how to address it and be more transparent and accountable so that we do not panic and just do anything”. “The sad part of it is that, at times the government has a very good intention because you want to protect life and property or lives of Ghanaians or citizens, you may relax and not comply with some of the rules and at the same time, remain accused of abusing our resources”, he noted. He noted: “It is good we have a second look at our laws on procurement, we look at our laws on financial management to see in cases of such developments, how quickly can funds be made available, what type of procurement can be done and what are the accountability mechanisms that must be in place”. “I’m aware there is a trust fund which was set up and it provides for some of those. It is good to test it against what happened to see whether there was full compliance. If there was no compliance, what made it impossible or difficult for it to be complied with”, Mr Domelevo said. The Ministry of Finance, in March this year, debunked media reports that claimed that the government spent GH¢1.7 billion on the COVID-19 pandemic, even though the government says it spent GH¢19 billion. The Ministry, in a statement, said GH¢1.7 billion reflects expenditures on only two items under the COVID-19 related expenditures, namely, COVID-19 Alleviation Programme 1 (CAP1) and Emergency Preparedness and Response Plan 1. It said other COVID-19 expenditures were COVID-19 Alleviation Programme 2 (CAP2), COVID-19 Preparedness Plan 2, Provision of Health Infrastructure, Seed Fund for Capitalisation of Development Bank, among others. As of end-December 2020, the ministry said Ghana incurred a revenue shortfall of GH¢11,942.7 million and expenditure increase of GH¢14,074.2 million in relation to their respective targets in the 2020 budget passed in Parliament in November 2019. It said the amount of GH¢16.8 billion referred to in Appendix 12B only provided information on sources of financing the fiscal gap resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic. These monies were sourced from the IMF (GH¢5,853 million), AfDB (GH¢405.7 million), EU (GH¢504 million), and BOG COVID-19 Bonds (GH¢10,000 million), among others. For the avoidance of doubt, Appendix 2A of the 2021 Budget Statement indicates that total financing for 2020 was GH¢44,897.9 million and not GH¢16,460.4 million. The Ministry also noted that media reports that suggested that the government announced that the COVID-19 levy was to be utilised in paying for free water and electricity of 2020 was incorrect. The statement said the Minister of Information’s comment to the effect that COVID-19 expenses include water and electricity, ought not to be misconstrued to mean the new taxes of 2021 are a direct charge for those services. The details of the usage of funds from the COVID-19 levy are listed on Page 75 of the 2021 budget as follows: Procurement, distribution and administration of vaccines ‒ the first batch of 600,000 doses from the COVAX Facility have already been delivered and an additional 17,600,000 vaccine doses to be delivered by June, with more to come in the course of the year. As of Wednesday 10th March 2021, over 262,335 Ghanaians received the first dose of the vaccines; Establishment of fourteen (14) medical waste treatment facilities across the country for safe disposal of medical waste in collaboration with the private sector; Thirty-three (33) major health projects approved for implementation at a cost of €890 million; To date, 14,600,000 pieces of personal protective equipment produced domestically and distributed to health workers, students, teaching and non-teaching staff of tertiary and secondary educational institutions; Fumigation and disinfection of public places including, airports, markets, schools, hospitals, offices etc.; Agenda 111 ‒ the construction of 100-bed District Hospitals in 101 Districts with no hospitals, seven (7) Regional Hospitals for the new Regions, including one for the Western Region, the construction of two (2) new psychiatric hospitals for the Middle and Northern Belts, respectively, and the rehabilitation of Effia-Nkwanta Hospital in the Western Region; and The need to recruit more health care professionals, in addition to the 100,000 recruited in the first term of the President. —classfm Apexnewsgh.com/Ghana/Ngamegbulam Chidozie Stephen Please contact Apexnewsgh.com on email apexnewsgh@gmail.com for your credible news publications. Contact: 05555568093
CONFIRMED: Daniel Domelevo appointed European Union’s External Auditor, set to Audit Govt of Ghana
In what is rather a miraculous drama of fate, forcefully retired Auditor General of the Republic of Ghana, Mr. Daniel Yaw Domelovo has been appointed by the European Union Commission as part of its broad team of External Auditors who monitor and audit EU grants and funding support to outside agencies and countries around the world. The appointment was confirmed to MyNewsGh.com by credible sources in Ghana’s EU office who said they can’t yet confirm which countries or EU partner agencies Domelevo will he assigned to audit as that does not lay in their ambit here in Ghana. We were however hinted that he could be assigned auditing roles for EU-Government of Ghana projects giving his wide level of local experience and familiarity with Ghanaians issues. “But this is not assured”.MyNewsGh.com learnt the EU entered into negotiations with the Auditor General not because he was facing woes in his work in Ghana but because he was due for retirement “at the time we approached him with a contract offer and this is not new”. The EU says it offers such consultancy contract opportunities on an “approach basis” for retired Civil servants especially Judges, Auditors, and Security personnel in Immigration, military, police, and intelligence in African nations where the EU has an interest in order to facilitate its work all on the record. This will not be the first time Mr. Daniel Yaw Domelovo is working with an external body as he has a rich experience working on World Bank Auditing projects and has worked in Tanzania and Zimbabwe on various external initiatives. Mr. Daniel Domelevo holds an Executive Master’s degree in Business Administration (Finance) from the University of Ghana Business School. He is also a professional accountant and has been a member of the Institute of Chartered Accountants, Ghana since 1992. His expertise in Public Financial Management (PFM) includes a proven track record serving in several senior staff roles for the Controller and Accountant General’s Department (CAGD) of the Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning of Ghana for over 18 years. Prior to his appointment as the Auditor General for the Republic of Ghana and the head of Ghana’s Supreme Audit Institution (SAI), Daniel Domelevo held numerous positions including Senior Financial Management Specialist with the World Bank. While working at the World Bank, he was responsible for the PFM project in Malawi and Zimbabwe.He has also worked as the Chief Accountant for the Ghana Film Industry Corporation (now TV3).In December 2016, he was appointed as Auditor General for the Republic of Ghana. He succeeded Mr Richard Quartei Quartey, who retired after 7 years of service (2009-2016). He was ordered by President Akufo-Addo to proceed on accumulated leave last year prior to the election and was forcefully retired when he resumed work with only 3 months to go. The presidency claimed he had retired and was born in 1960 instead of 1961. Domelovo continues to enjoy wide support both home and abroad as Ghana’s anti-corruption fighter who was barred from doing his work. MyNewsGh Please contact Apexnewsgh.com on email apexnewsgh@gmail.com for your credible news publications. Contact: 0555568093
You were gossiping with Domelevo – Adom-Otchere chastises CSOs
Paul Adom-Otchere, the host of Good Evening Ghana on Metro TV, has alleged that Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) in the country were going about gossiping with Daniel Domelevo, the immediate past Auditor-General who was forced to retire by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo. According to Adom-Otchere, the leaders of these CSOs always went to the office of Daniel Yao Domelevo at 5 PM every evening to gossip about some ministers or government appointees the then Auditor-General had telephoned but did not respond. “This gossiping and whispering that they used to do; by the close of [the] day, they all gather in Domelevo’s office and he is telling them that he called the Finance ooo; he didn’t even pick the call, that’s rubbish!” Paul Adom-Otchere alleged on the Editorial segment of his show on Thursday, March 11. “That’s gossiping, that’s hearsay…whispering about and then documents are done by Domelevo and it ends up in the media, and Investigative Journalists have it and they are publishing. That’s gossiping,” Adom-Otchere alleged. “Where is the single corruption Domelevo found against the government? He should publish.” He went on: “They are always there at 5 PM gossiping, whispering…you can always calculate, they come there, they are on the phone talking, whispering, gossiping about ministers. Is the Auditor-General’s work gossip work?” Adom-Otchere then went on to suggest that he was opposed to the appointment of Domelevo because President Mahama who appointed him in December 2016 was just about exiting office after he had lost the presidential election. “Why did President Mahama exercise an authority whose spirit had been withdrawn from him?” Adom-Otchere asked, suggesting that Domelevo’s appointment by President Mahama was too close to January 2017, the end of Mahama’s tenure, hence making the appointment unsound. Adom-Otchere suggested further to justify the forced termination of Domelevo’s appointment because “sometimes civil societies stage a coup d’état”, adding, “…because you (CSOs) went to his office and he told you that his office [had] been locked and the padlock changed? But he is on leave; if you are on leave what are you going to do there?” Adom-Otchere then chided the CSOs for going quiet when Domelevo was asked to pay certain monies when the latter was being investigated. “Is that how we want to build our society? The chickens will come home to roost one day,” Adom-Otchere warned. Paul Adom-Otchere further claimed that during the election campaign season of 2020, Daniel Yao Domelevo’s issue and that of now-departed Special Prosecutor Martin Amidu were being pushed by the CSOs to damage the electoral fortunes of the incumbent. “You pushed Domelevo too much; you pushed Martin Amidu too much; you go to the election of December 7, the Ghanaian people retained Akufo-Addo with a heavy mandate. You haven’t noticed? You think the Ghanaian people are interested in gossip, no!” he said. “People want politicians who can deliver, they don’t want gossip and whisperings, sitting in Christ The King,” Adom-Otchere said, referencing the church where Domelevo celebrated his end of tenure after being sacked by President Akufo-Addo. Finally, Adom-Otchere averred that Daniel Yao Domelevo was not always right in his decisions; that the Akufo-Addo administration has the power to ask him to proceed on leave and if the CSOs disagree, they can always challenge the President’s constitutional mandate in court. Ghanaweb Please contact Apexnewsgh.com on email apexnewsgh@gmail.com for your credible news publications. Contact: 0555568093
Akufo-Addo encouraged me when i was confused about whether to accept or reject the AG position–Domelevo
The immediate past Auditor-General Daniel Domelevo has revealed that the then-President-elect Nana Akufo-Addo influenced him to accept the Auditor-General position when President John Dramani Mahama appointed him in 2016 during his time of leaving office as Ghana President. “in 2016 when I was appointed, and I was confused as to whether I should accept or reject it, a call came through from Dr. Matthew Opoku Premeph and after greeting him, he said, ‘hold on for the then President-elect’. So, Nana Addo Danquah Akufo-Addo encouraged me, he said, ‘Go and take the job’. That is why I am very grateful to him,” Mr. Domelevo made the shocking revelation during his Thanksgiving Mass at the Christ The King Catholic Church in Accra on Wednesday to mark the end of his embattled service to the nation. According to him, his relationship with President Akufo-Addo has been very cordial since then and he was grateful to him for his support. “We are here to thank God and we are here to do that irrespective of what has happened. I would like to thank former President John Mahama who appointed me as the Auditor-General of Ghana. I thank him for the opportunity to serve my motherland. I would also like to thank President Nana Akufo-Addo for working with me.” He added The former Auditor General Domelevo was ordered by President Akufo-Addo to go retirement because records made available to the latter by the Board of the Audit Service indicated that he, Domelevo, had passed the retirement age of 60 years. Apexnewsgh.com/Ghana/Ngamegbulam Chidozie Stephen Please contact Apexnewsgh.com on email apexnewsgh@gmail.com for your credible news publications. Contact: 0555568093.
Domelevo: Akufo-Addo’s gov’t made silly habit of not letting sleeping dogs lie – Amoah
Dr Lloyd Amoah of the University of Ghana has criticized the Akufo-Addo administration over the tension between the Board of the Audit Service and the Auditor General, Mr Daniel Domelevo This comes after the board said in a three-page letter addressed to Mr. Domelevo on Tuesday March 2, just a day before he resumes work after proceeding on compulsorily leave, that he was due for retirement on June 1, 2020. In providing details to its claim, the Audit Service Board said in a letter dated 26th February 2021 that, “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 correspondence stated. The Board said Mr. Domelevo’s reference to a Parish Priest and provision of his contact for further verification of his date of birth is not admissible. “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.” The Board consequently insisted that Mr. Domelevo was due for compulsory retirement on June 1, 2020, and was in fact not a Ghanaian but a Togolese. “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. In a Facebook post, a livid Dr Amoah who is the Director of the Centre for Asian Studies-University of Ghanasaid “This administration has made a silly habit of not letting sleeping dogs lie : PUB and now Domelovo. YOOOO!!” In another post on the same matter, he said “It was such foolery that claimed that Nkrumah was Ivorian. We are back to SQUARE ONE. PAY ATTENTION.” Executive Director of the Ghana Centre for Democratic Development (CDD-Ghana) Professor H Kwesi Prempeh also described the action of the Board of the Audit Service against the Auditor General Mr Daniel Domelevo as autocratic pettiness. Prof Prempeh commenting on a Facebook post by Dr Lloyd Amoah said “Just heard this: Dude was forced out on leave as a Ghanaian, only to return as a Togolese due for retirement. The height of autocratic pettiness.” 3news.com Please contact Apexnewsgh.com on email apexnewsgh@gmail.com for your credible news publications. Contact: 0555568093









