Audio By Carbonatix
The Finance Ministry says it has recovered the GH¢1.1 million paid to non-staff of the Ministry which was reported by the Auditor-General.
The Ministry said it recovered the said amount when it’s attention was drawn to the discrepancy.
A Deputy Minister of Finance, John Kumah made this known in a Facebook post on Wednesday, August 31.

Mr. Kumah thus urged the Auditor-General to also comment on recoveries made in its final report.
“Kindly note that the funds paid were recovered when the attention of the Ministry was drawn to this anomaly. This is why I always insist that the Auditor-General's report must also have update on recoveries being made.”
Meanwhile, the Deputy Minister also stated the the supposed “ghost names” were personnel seconded from the Ghana Revenue Authority to the Ministry.
“The three Ghost names are personnel seconded from GRA, for whom there was some misunderstanding about which payroll they belonged to for the period of the secondment. The amounts paid have been recovered from the GRA as indicated and the Ministry will in due time share more details.”
The Auditor-General in its 2021 report on the Public Accounts of Ghana – Ministries, Departments and Other Agencies stated that some persons who are not staff of the Finance Ministry were paid salaries.

The three individuals; Allotey James, Nana Yaw Asiedu and Adam Habibu received a combined GH¢1,112,896.00 as salaries between January 2020 and December 2021.
According to the latest report, there were no traces of the trio’s personal files at the Ministry.
“Regulation 86 of the Public Financial Management Regulations, 2019 (L.I. 2378) states that a Principal Spending Officer of a covered entity shall ensure that only the names of personnel who are eligible to receive payment for work done are kept on the payment voucher and keep records of the nominal roll of the covered entity in a manner that ensures that the correct amount of emolument is paid.
“We noted that three persons were paid a total of GH¢1,112,895.96 as salaries for the period January 2020 to December 2021, but we could not trace their personal files and names on the nominal roll of the Ministry,” parts of the report read.
Latest Stories
-
Pay teacher allowances to improve student performance – Ntim Fordjour urges gov’t
2 hours -
Why Alonso’s chances of survival at Real Madrid are slim
2 hours -
Legal Green Association launches scholarship scheme for law students
2 hours -
Simon Madjie writes: Oti Region: Ghana’s emerging growth frontier
3 hours -
Cedi slips amid seasonal heat; one dollar equals GH¢12.20
3 hours -
Yirenkyi-Addo wins ‘Deloitte CEO Impact Award’
3 hours -
‘I am not weak’ says Slot, but Salah could return
3 hours -
World Bank’s new outcome bond supports clean cooking initiative in Ghana
3 hours -
NACOC nabs 3 in connection with 1,158kg suspected cocaine shipment to Belgium
3 hours -
‘Certiorari is not stay of execution’: Amaliba defends Parliament’s notification on Kpandai vacancy
3 hours -
Sister Sandy set to host Medikal’s BYK Concert at the Accra Sports Stadium
4 hours -
AfroFuture Ghana 2025 adds Rema, KiDi and more to its December festival lineup
4 hours -
Paramount launches rival bid for Warner Bros Discovery
4 hours -
Ukraine’s European allies press for more security guarantees
5 hours -
Why the haste? – NPP MP question’s EC notification over vacant Kpandai seat despite stay of exection
5 hours
