Audio By Carbonatix
The Minister for Defence, Dr Edward Omane Boamah, has revealed that nearly half of army trainees currently undergoing military training may face withdrawal after an internal audit uncovered significant breaches in entry requirements.
Addressing the Government Accountability Series on Monday, July 21, Dr Boamah disclosed that an audit of 452 army trainees in the Ghana Armed Forces uncovered that 46% of them did not meet the eligibility criteria for enlistment.
The findings relate to the Regular Career Course 64 and 65, as well as the Short Service Commission Course 62 of the Ghana Army.
"Out of 452, 210 did not meet the eligibility test—representing 46%," Dr Boamah said.
He further revealed that for Regular Career Course 64, currently in training, 34 recruits were found to have bypassed one or more critical stages of the enlistment process.
Despite the breaches, the Minister said the government has decided against immediately sending the affected trainees home due to the potential national security implications.
"It was difficult sending them home since they had been in training for almost one year. Releasing 34 well-trained, energetic youth who had endured military training in a volatile, uncertain, complex, and ambiguous West Africa sub-region—where free-floating weapons and ammunition abound—can have severe consequences," Dr Boamah explained.
Instead, the trainees have been directed to submit the necessary documentation or qualifications they initially failed to present.
"They have been directed to fulfil all criteria—that’s the 34," he stated.
However, the Minister made it clear that those who fail to meet the requirements will be dismissed from the programme.
"If they fail to meet these requirements, they will be released from training," he warned.
Dr Boamah reaffirmed the government’s commitment to upholding discipline, transparency, and meritocracy in the recruitment process of the security services. He stressed that the integrity of the Ghana Armed Forces must be preserved at all times.
"We are committed to ensuring that recruitment into the Ghana Armed Forces remains credible and beyond reproach," he concluded.
Latest Stories
-
From fear to empowerment: Dzifa Gunu’s mission to transform Ghana’s digital future
1 minute -
Wontumi Farms, directors to face prosecution over GH₵24m alleged EXIM Bank loan fraud
8 minutes -
PAG demands answers on EOCO’s record GH¢337m recoveries
10 minutes -
AG: Gov’t will use surcharge and disallowance to recover mismanaged public funds
13 minutes -
Sarkodie recounts terrible ‘wee biscuit’ experience during US show
14 minutes -
1D1F: The policy that broke Ghana’s industrial summit
16 minutes -
GT Music Concert lights up Accra as Ghana and Nigeria’s stars share one stage
23 minutes -
Bawumia appeals to NPP delegates: ‘Vote for me on competence, track record and vision’
45 minutes -
NDC supported establishment of Office of the Special Prosecutor – Samuel Jinapor
50 minutes -
High Court bars investigative journalist from publishing on private individual, imposes GH¢10,000 cost
2 hours -
‘Inconsistent Vinicius Jnr not on Neymar’s level’ – ex Botafogo manager
2 hours -
T-bills: Government records 47% oversubscription; interest rates fall
2 hours -
OSP deserves a second chance; it must decentralise its operations
2 hours -
Dafeamekpor says OSP is “guzzling money”
2 hours -
Stabilising the cedi should not come at the expense of Ghanaian workers
2 hours
