
Audio By Carbonatix
An anti-corruption crusader has blamed the slow pace of work at the Office of Special Prosecutor (OSP) on the government.
According to Vitus Azeem, the public expectation that has not been met must be blamed on the appointing authority which has the power to allocate money and resources to OSP.

“It also means our expectations of the appointing authority have not been met and it means words are not matching actions,” he told Daniel Dadzie, host of Joy FM’s Super Morning Show Monday.
On Thursday, July 12, 2018, the President, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, swore-into office the Governing Board of the Office of Special Prosecutor.
At a brief ceremony at the Jubilee House, President Akufo-Addo noted that, as required by the dictates of the Special Prosecutor’s Act, Act 915, of 2017, “the Office is fully functional.”
Among other things, the Special Prosecutor is empowered to investigate political corruption and receive petitions from citizens to initiate investigations.
However, one year on, the Special Prosecutor has only one lawyer and has filed only one case in court.
Board of the Office of Special Prosecutor
According to Mr. Vitus Azeem, the public is disappointed by the slow pace of work given that OSP was part of the government’s priority list during the last elections.
Despite the many challenges which have bedevilled that office, he was hoping that “by this time one or two people will be in jail and some monies recouped.”

But Azeem will not blame the Office of Special Prosecutor for the delays. He suspects that like other government agencies, that office is struggling to access resources that have been voted to it given the many bureaucratic processes associated with government business.
He reminds the government that “the Office of Special Prosecutor requires special attention and must not be treated like other ministries”
Meanwhile, the Government has allocated GH¢180 million to the Special Prosecutor’s Office to be used to resource the office and strengthen it to fight corruption.
The Finance Minister, Mr. Ken Ofori-Atta, who announced this in the presentation of the 2019 Budget to Parliament added that the government was also prepared to “provide additional resources during the course of 2019 to enable the Special Prosecutor’s Office to carry out its mandate.”
Latest Stories
-
Police arrest convicted fraudster Eric Afoakwa while attempting to leave Ghana
6 minutes -
Only court orders can override constitutional safeguards in arrests – Justice Abdulai
19 minutes -
I never stopped anyone from travelling as AG – Dame condemns arrest of former NAFCO CEO
33 minutes -
I’ll choose a stepfather any day; a stepfather shaped the man I am today – Konnected Minds founder
36 minutes -
Parents should sue WAEC over examination leakages – Prof. Antwi
40 minutes -
School admissions should be based on merit, not protocol – Prof. Opoku Antwi
44 minutes -
When the waters recede, public health must lead
47 minutes -
A friend inspired me to build a Caribbean restaurant in US – Prof. Opoku Antwi
48 minutes -
I used to sell Chinese clothes in London – Konnected Minds Podcast founder
58 minutes -
Hanan arrest based on frozen bank account claim is ‘comical’ — Godfred Dame
1 hour -
‘Security agencies are the biggest abusers of constitutional rights of Ghanaians’ – Justice Abdulai
1 hour -
How a stranger ‘miraculously’ gave me his house when I arrived in the US – Prof. Antwi shares
1 hour -
Ghana Battalion 14 completes reconnaissance mission ahead of UN peacekeeping deployment in South Sudan
2 hours -
HAWA Project Manager calls for climate-responsive humanitarian systems as extreme weather intensifies
2 hours -
KMA ‘samansaman’ arrests 13 over poor sanitary practices in their homes
2 hours