Audio By Carbonatix
Pressure group, Arise Ghana has served notice it will join the Minority’s demonstration against the Bank of Ghana's governor and his deputies.
According to the group, the decision was taken after a “painstaking study of the damning revelations contained in the 2022 report and financial statements of the Bank of Ghana.”
In a press statement issued on Monday, August 21, it also described the central bank’s decision to construct a new headquarters as irresponsible.
“Arise Ghana has followed keenly the recent public discourse on the dire state of the Bank of Ghana emanating from the 2022 Audit Report and Financial Statements of the bank.”
“After painstakingly studying the damning revelations contained in the 2022 Report and Financial Statements of the Bank of Ghana, we have come to the conclusion that the Central Bank is in the unprecedented mess it presently finds itself because of crass mismanagement by the Addison-led Board and management.”
The pressure group also lashed out at the BoG for allegedly printing GH¢77 billion for the government.
“We hold the view that the illegal printing of money by BoG in the year 2021 and 2022 to the tune of GHS77 billion to finance the recklessness of the corrupt Akufo-Addo/Bawumia/NPP government, in flagrant disregard of section 30 of the BOG Act (as amended) is the height of irresponsibility and must be condemned by all well-meaning Ghanaians.”
“Even more bizarre and condemnable, is the illegal writing of about GHS32 billion of this amount without recourse to Parliament in breach of section 53 of the Public Financial Management Act.”
“In fact, these irresponsible and criminal acts of the BoG Governor, ably supported by his deputies and useless Board of Directors, is what has plunged the once profitable BoG bank into unprecedented losses to the tune of GHS60.8 billion and a negative equity of GHS55.1 billion in 2022 alone.”
The Minority in Parliament on Tuesday, August 8, demanded the resignation of Dr Ernest Addison and his deputies, levelling grave allegations of gross financial mismanagement within the Bank of Ghana.
The NDC MPs claimed that Dr Addison must quit his post for supervising the ¢60 billion loss the Central Bank recorded for the year-ending 2022.
The Minority also alleged that the Bank of Ghana failed to report its activities to Parliament.
BoG in a statement attributed the losses to the government’s domestic debt restructuring activities and the depreciation of the cedi.
This position, the Majority Leader Osei-Kyei-Mensah-Bonsu has affirmed, stating that no wrongdoing has occurred.
However, the Minority have warned that should the trio fail to resign, they will organise a mammoth protest against them.
Latest Stories
-
Seidu Agongo builds lifeline facility for Ghana Police Hospital’s ‘Unknown Patients’
12 seconds -
Ghana ‘scandalised’ by rising job losses under NDC – Dr Adomako Kissi
8 minutes -
De Mayor Foundation supports over 700 widows and vulnerable persons in Adeiso
26 minutes -
Poll shows Mahama widening lead in hypothetical 2024 re-run
40 minutes -
Police Hospital relieved as new facility for ‘unknown patients’ eases long-standing burden
48 minutes -
Gender Ministry empowers Kayayei with health, financial literacy and safety skills
1 hour -
Goldbod’s gold strategy has anchored currency stability and economic confidence – Senyo Hosi
1 hour -
‘The law is the law’ – Mahama insists as Asake pleads on Cyborg’s behalf over firearm incident
1 hour -
Police arrest 2 over illegal possession of 2,600 AK-47 ammunition in Ashanti Region
1 hour -
Goldbod is rewriting Ghana’s gold story and restoring national value – Senyo Hosi asserts
2 hours -
Goldbod: Loss or no loss? The price of everything and the value of nothing
2 hours -
Goldbod’s $214m cost isn’t a loss but a strategic policy investment – Senyo Hosi
2 hours -
Government settles US$709m Eurobond obligations ahead of due date
2 hours -
Low inflation and cheaper imports show Goldbod’s true economic value – Senyo Hosi
2 hours -
VAT reforms: GRA raises registration threshold to GH¢750,000, cuts rate to 20% from Jan. 2026
2 hours
