Audio By Carbonatix
A consultant to the Chinery Hesse committee on emoluments for ex-presidents has hit back at critics and called for more education by the National Commission on Civic Education.
According to Mr. Austin Gameh, most of the privileges contained in the report are already provided for by the 1992 constitution for which reason the criticisms cannot be valid.
A huge public outcry greeted the report which recommended two houses to be built for the ex-president at a place of his choice, ex-gratia award equivalent to 12 months consolidated salary for each full year of service and other accompanying privileges.
Describing the criticisms as “interesting views,” Mr. Gameh explains the report was well within the confines of the constitution and was a product of a comprehensive research on existing documents, including the Green Street report.
“Article 68 of the constitution clearly states what should be given to former presidents, of course, taking into consideration related practices elsewhere.” Mr. Gameh told Joy News’ Evans Mensah on Monday.
Mr Gameh further argued the committee duly considered the state of the economy and the productivity level of the country before making its recommendation.
He explained the committee's report was only a recommendation, subject to parliamentary approval.
The fourth parliament of the fourth republic indeed approved the report before it rose on January 6, 2009.
Asked if the benefits recommended in the report were not astronomical, Mr. Gameh said “I think former presidents having six cars is not too much because the former president can have two visitors, I mean foreign visitors at the same time. He travels with security, some of them would have to go ahead of him,” adding, other people have more than six cars in their homes in the country.
He however noted the present parliament is free to initiate steps to review the reports if it thinks the benefits are on a high side.
But Mr. Ato Conduah a management consultant says the benefits are astronomical.
Even though the idea of rewarding our ex-presidents is not bad, he argued the benefits should be within the strength of the economy.
Listen to excerpts of the interview with Mr. Gameh in the attached audio.
Story by Nathan Gadugah
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
DVLA warns against fake SMS traffic fines and fraudulent payment links
13 minutes -
Asafo Market traders, drivers appeal to KMA over recurring flooding
21 minutes -
Mahama’s approval rating drops to 58.9% but majority of Ghanaians still back him — IEA poll
23 minutes -
Veep welcomes Mahama home after UK, Belarus visits
31 minutes -
Tribute book “IMPRESSIONS” launched in honour of KNUST’s Prof. Ibok Oduro
36 minutes -
Joy Prime TV to broadcast World Cup 2026 matches
38 minutes -
Northern Region leaders back Ghana vaccine production plan but raise quality and access concerns
41 minutes -
Ghana’s economy expands by 6.4% in Q1 of 2026, driven by Services and Mining
46 minutes -
CSIR soil scientist warns imported fertilisers may be degrading Ghana’s farmlands
47 minutes -
KATH OPD resumes full operations after suspension of doctors’ strike
52 minutes -
Ahmad Tea announces Antoine Semenyo as Global Brand Ambassador
53 minutes -
Tarkwa-Nsuaem NPP elections halted by Sekondi High Court over injunction application
55 minutes -
Ghana’s unemployment pegged at 13.1%, inequality at 43.5%
56 minutes -
GMet warns of heightened flood risk in Accra as June rainfall projected to intensify
58 minutes -
Tension at Afari Military Hospital as soldiers block Minority MPs’ inspection of abandoned facility
1 hour