Audio By Carbonatix
The Pension and Independent Bondholders are questioning the sincerity of the Finance Minister’s apology over the mess created by the domestic debt exchange programme (DDEP).
This was after Dr. Mohammed Amin Adam, during a town hall meeting in Accra, acknowledged the hardships being experienced in the country.
The Finance Minister explained that, “We decided to restructure our debts because it was one of the requirements by the IMF. We started with the domestic debt exchange programme and the domestic debt exchange programme was very successful, achieving 95 percent participation. On this note, I would like to appeal to the people of this country to forgive us.
“It is never the intention of any government to impose hardships on its people, more so the NPP government that has demonstrated that we want to reduce the burden of the Ghanaian people.”
According to Dr. Amin Adam, “It was a necessary, important decision at the time. If we had avoided it our development or economy would not be what it is today. All the support you gave us during the DDEP has contributed largely to the recovery our economy is seeing today".
But speaking to JoyNews, a member of the bondholders’ forum, Harry Yamson, said the apology does not lessen the impact of Ghana's challenging fiscal space on the people.
"No one can accept a non-apology. This cannot be an apology. I mean this is essentially asking people to not acknowledge the truth.
"The truth is that the government is not making good on the amount that it needs to pay to bondholders. The government is not paying those amounts. It is more in default than it is respecting its obligation," he stressed.
On his part, the Convenor of the Pension Bondholder Forum, Dr. Adu Anane Antwi, said while the apology may be accepted, it does not undo the pain endured during the period.
"Traditionally, I haven't come across anybody who will apologize and people will say they will not accept. They will normally accept the apology.
"But as we know, apology does not solve problems that have been caused by one's action. If I slap you and later on I apologise, you will still have gotten the slap I gave you and so that is the challenge I have.
"So when we are doing some of these things, we should be mindful so that we don't do things that will create discomfort for others."
He asked the government to focus on reducing the national debt to bring relief to the suffering masses.
“You can’t talk about having improved things when invested funds are still locked up in this financial market,” he stressed.
Latest Stories
-
Fire engulfs building at Laterbiokoshie, fire service battles blaze
9 minutes -
Ivory Coast maintains GH¢3,600 equivalent per cocoa bag as Ghana reels from 28% emergency price cut
17 minutes -
GFZA celebrates National Chocolate Week and highlights opportunities in cocoa sector
30 minutes -
Former MMDCEs appeal to President Mahama for payment of end-of-service benefits
31 minutes -
Former MMDCEs petition President Mahama over unpaid benefits
34 minutes -
Plan International Ghana launches 9.4 million CAD support for women’s rights groups
54 minutes -
KsTU adjudged best technical university, 4th best university in Ghana in 2026 QS sub-Saharan Africa rankings
58 minutes -
Ghana considers extradition option in intimate image leak case – Gender Minister
1 hour -
Bawumia launches NPP rebuild, announces new policy unit ahead of 2028
1 hour -
We’re strengthening cross-border and cybersecurity collaboration to combat online abuse – Gender Minister
1 hour -
Obama clarifies views on aliens after saying ‘they’re real’ on podcast
1 hour -
Russia killed opposition leader Alexei Navalny using dart frog toxin, UK says
1 hour -
OMCs commence fuel price increases: GOIL sells petrol at GH¢10.24 as diesel rises to GH¢12.83
1 hour -
Modern, Vertical, Visionary: PUNA officially launched in Accra
2 hours -
Bishop Joel Duncan-Williams pays courtesy call on Central Regional Minister during evangelical visit to UCC
2 hours
