Audio By Carbonatix
The Minority in Parliament has demanded the presence of the Food and Agriculture, Finance and Education Ministers, to appear before Parliament over the picketing of food suppliers at the National Buffer Stock Company (NAFCO).
Government owes the food suppliers GH¢270 million for food that was supplied to Senior High Schools across the country from 2021 to 2023.
Speaking on the floor of Parliament on Friday, the North Tongu MP, Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa said “Mr Speaker, I want to appeal to you that the Minister for Education and Minister for Agric should be programmed to appear before this House urgently. Possibly, we should add the Minister for Finance.”
The trio Ministers, Bryan Acheampong, Dr Yaw Osei Adutwum and Ken Ofori-Atta are required to assure the House how they are going to settle the food supplier’s debts.

Some members of the National Food Suppliers Association spent the night at the premises of NAFCO to demand payment of monies owed them for over two years.
Mr Ablakwa is worried about the situation, and wants immediate action taken to pay the suppliers.
“Over the last four days running to five days continuously, they have been at the mercy of the vagaries of the weather. My Speaker, last night the Minority Leader shared a video with me on how the suppliers were wailing, rolling on the floor and I was so depressed and went to bed last night really troubled.

In a related development, a ranking member on Parliament’s Education Committee has raised allegations of dishonesty against NAFCO regarding its interactions with the National Food Suppliers Association.
Peter Notsu-Kotoe expressed his sympathies to the members of the National Food Suppliers Association.
Speaking on JoyNews‘ AM Show, the Akatsi South MP insisted that NAFCO has become a hub for shady dealings.
“Bufferstock has become a hub for corruption where the things that go on is very bad. There should be a point where we investigate the activities of Buffer Stock,” he indicated.
Notsu-Kotoe further stated that the aggrieved suppliers informed him that the Ministry of Education has already disbursed approximately 90% of the arrears to the Buffer Stock Company.
However, the funds have yet to be made available to the suppliers, raising concerns about the transparency and integrity of the process.
He, therefore, called for a public inquiry into the company’s activities.
Latest Stories
-
GMTF deepens engagement with Holy Family Hospital, Techiman, to expand specialised care
35 seconds -
NDC Regional Chairmen commend GoldBod CEO Sammy Gyamfi during courtesy call
8 minutes -
Ex-NEIP CEO Kofi Ofosu Nkansah’s home searched by NIB over scholarship sale allegations
12 minutes -
Mahama reaffirms Ghana’s commitment to transparency ahead of APRM peer review
23 minutes -
You won’t be left behind – Gender Minister assures unemployed graduates with disabilities of gov’t commitment to jobs
24 minutes -
Former UNAIDS Executive Director urges media to bring NTDs out of the shadows
25 minutes -
Ghana engages Afreximbank to advance strategic minerals development
39 minutes -
NDC sticks with Baba Jamal for Ayawaso East By-election despite vote-buying probe
48 minutes -
Give retired pastors key roles to play in government – Prophet John Anokye
51 minutes -
UniMAC External Affairs Officer attends 24th GUPS First General Assembly Meeting
53 minutes -
Iran is a threat to Middle East stability – Israeli Ambassador to Ghana
57 minutes -
Mahama inaugurates NAPRM Governing Council ahead of historic ‘Second-Generation’ Peer Review
1 hour -
WUSC–ACTIVATE Project equips over 200 youth with practical agriculture skills in Asante Mampong
1 hour -
IMANI brief: Ghana’s 24-hour economy needs systems, not new authorities
1 hour -
Tems becomes first African female artiste to have 7 entries on Billboard Hot 100
1 hour
