Audio By Carbonatix
Parliament has approved an amount of ¢1.4 billion for the Ghana Education Trust Fund (GETFund).
According to a report from the House sighted by JoyNews‘ Joseph Opoku Gakpo, GETFund is expected to spend ¢866 million, representing 60% of the total amount to pay back its debt.
From the report, an amount of ¢30.2 million is going to Members of Parliament for emergency projects and monitoring.
Also, about ¢13 million of the approved amount will be used to cover expenses for a special purpose vehicle, ‘Daakye’. ‘Daakye’ is expected to help GETFund raise ¢1.3 billion on the bond market.
Reacting to the expenses, Minority Leader Haruna Iddrisu, who was unhappy with the allocation of the fund approved, stated that Daakye is a plan to “loot and share” state resources.
Mr Iddrisu said that “ the Ministry of Finance is creating a structure called Daakye siphon money, this must stop. You don't need a Daakye to loan money for GETFund. This is not acceptable.”
“Why are you now paying money on bond service, in the name of Daakye? Where is the GETFund board? Where is the GETFund administrator? What are the governance structures within the GETFund act?"
Also speaking on the floor of Parliament, Minority Spokesperson on Finance, Cassiel Ato Forson, expressed his displeasure at GETFund’s use of the approved money to pay off debts.
He stated that the GETFund policy is to use approved funds to improve education, infrastructure among others in the country.
“Today, the GETfund is collapsing. We cannot continue allowing the Ghana Education Trust Fund to use the amount they are supposed to use to improve our education for the purposes of paying a debt; that is not what the policy said,” Dr Forson added.
Latest Stories
-
Ghana launches landmark Women and Youth Employment programme to create over 30,000 jobs
38 minutes -
Professional scouts identify talent at Dr. Grace Community League 2026
50 minutes -
Flood fight requires bold demolitions and political will — Oppong Asamoah
52 minutes -
African youth emerge as key drivers of Africa’s forest future, report finds
2 hours -
St. Augustine’s 2002 Year Group launches teacher accommodation project
2 hours -
Afari Military Hospital was 97% complete before change of gov’t – Dr. Nsiah-Asare
2 hours -
Platform-based activity supporting income generation in Ghana’s $1bn digital economy
2 hours -
NLA staff threaten industrial action over working conditions and salary dispute
2 hours -
NDC government has lost control – Afenyo-Markin
2 hours -
Teachers under siege: The growing crisis of indiscipline and violence in Ghanaian pre-tertiary schools
2 hours -
Tony’s Open Chain steps up child labour interventions in Ghana’s cocoa communities
3 hours -
Missing newborn sparks tension at Salaga Hospital as police detain nurse
3 hours -
Minority demands report of anti-flood taskforce for Parliamentary scrutiny
3 hours -
GH¢50m recapitalisation: Microfinance Companies plead for more time as Dec. 2026 deadline looms
3 hours -
Agenda 111 hospitals ready for operationalisation; gov’t must act – Dr Nsiah-Asare
3 hours