Audio By Carbonatix
The Head of Public Relations at COCOBOD, Fifi Boafo has said the Minority in Parliament's call for the resignation of COCOBOD Chief Executive Officer, Joseph Boahen Aidoo is an act of retaliation.
Speaking in an interview on Joy FM’s Top Story on Wednesday, he claimed that the call came as a result of the COCOBOD CEO correcting former President Mahama in a statement about his remarks regarding the increase in the price of cocoa to GH¢1,308.
Mr Mahama complained that the increase was insufficient and called the government "insensitive" to the plight of farmers.
But in a response, the COCOBOD CEO in a statement dated September 12 said Mr Mahama ought to be acquainted with the procedure for determining the producer price of cocoa.
Mr Aidoo explained that the 2023/24 crop was sold between October 2022 and March 2023 at international prices ranging from $2,200 to $2,400 per tonne.
“Since you have had the privilege of being in government before as the number one gentleman of the country, it is expected that you would be familiar with the process for determining the producer price of cocoa.
“I am, therefore, surprised that you chose, rather erroneously, to use the current international market price of cocoa at $3,600 per tonne as the basis for your calculation in your post on the recently announced producer price,” portions of the statement read.
For this reason, the Head of Public Relations at COCOBOD believes the call for the CEO's resignation is simply an act to get back at Mr Aidoo.
“This is just a way of getting back at him [COCOBOD CEO]. It is to be expected. The people who obviously, briefed the former President to make that mistake are the ones talking. So it is a way of diluting matters just to wash what they have done,” he said.
His comment comes against the backdrop of the Minority requesting the resignation of the COCOBOD CEO, for allegedly running down COCOBOD and shortchanging farmers.
According to the Minority Leader, Dr Cassiel Ato Forson, the cocoa sector has seen the lowest production in 15 years.
He added that COCOBOD has also recorded massive losses since 2017.
“Everything has gone bad at the Ghana COCOBOD. Last year, according to their own audit report, they declared a loss of 2.4 billion cedis in one year and the question is what is going on?
“Clearly, I don’t think that Joseph Boahen Aidoo deserves to be in office. He has mismanaged the cocoa sector massively, he has been reckless, shortchanged the cocoa farmers and in the end, he has brought productivity down, and so I don’t see he should be in office. He should rather resign instead of insulting former president Mahama," he said.
Latest Stories
-
Warner Bros $111bn sale to Paramount approved by US Justice Department
1 hour -
Kofi Adams slams FIFA over Partey visa refusal response
1 hour -
Thomas Partey’s Canada visa denial unfair, overreaction and wrong – Kofi Adams
2 hours -
FIFA issues disclaimer after Canada denies Thomas Partey entry
2 hours -
Karpowership Ghana plants 1,000 trees in Western Region as Forestry Commission urges protection of seedlings
2 hours -
‘We want to make Ghana proud’ – Jordan Ayew
2 hours -
Photos: Black Stars arrive in Providence for final phase of World Cup preparations
3 hours -
Deal to end fighting would lead to Hormuz reopening, Iran says
4 hours -
Bellingham, but no Guehi – England’s expected team
4 hours -
What you need to know as millions of SpaceX shares go up for sale
5 hours -
Ghana to seek review of Canada’s visa decision on Thomas Partey
5 hours -
KGL Foundation renovates Accra Psychiatric Hospital OPD
6 hours -
Zoomlion, NADMO deploy officers across Greater Accra to sustain anti-flood campaign
6 hours -
AG challenges Appiah-Kubi’s bid to withdraw from Wontumi case
6 hours -
The studio and one-bedroom advantage: Why smaller units are outperforming villas in Accra in 2026
7 hours