Audio By Carbonatix
In President John Dramani Mahama's latest round of appointments, Samuel Nartey George has been named as the Minister-designate for Communication, Digital Technology, and Innovations.
The announcement was made in a press release issued by the Acting Spokesperson to the President, Felix Kwakye Ofosu, on 21 January 2025.
As the Member of Parliament for Ningo Prampram, Mr George will formulate policies and initiatives to advance Ghana’s digital economy.
His role will also drive technological and innovation-focused reforms to ensure the country remains competitive in an increasingly digital global landscape.
This nomination underscores the government’s commitment to prioritising digital transformation and fostering innovation to create new opportunities for economic growth and development.
Below is his full profile
Latest Stories
-
Mahama deserves time on Kejetia Phase Two, Kumasi queen mothers tell traders
33 minutes -
GRA admits trader outreach on Publican AI may not have reached grassroots
40 minutes -
British widow dies in Ghana road crash after £1m romance scam losses
48 minutes -
The Presidency backs NLA-KGL Contract – NLA Boss
57 minutes -
NHIA board pays courtesy call on Asantehene, launches free NHIS registration drive for “King’s Month”
1 hour -
Invoice fraud pushed rollout of Publican AI system – GRA official
1 hour -
Who’s afraid of Interstitial Spaces? – A provocation
1 hour -
Honouring Dominic Frimpong: Premier League Match Day 30 fixtures postponed
1 hour -
Parliament’s Energy Committee commends NPA’s openness
1 hour -
NEDCo seizes more than 300 meters over illegal connections
1 hour -
Protecting Ghana’s cocoa reputation in the age of misinformation
1 hour -
Ghana reaffirms commitment to regional gas cooperation at WAGP ministerial meeting in Abuja
2 hours -
Tamale High Court to rule today in NDA corruption trial involving former officials
2 hours -
Teshie Nungua to face planned power interruptions as ECG upgrades transformers from April 28–30
2 hours -
NDC defends arrests, rejects claims of free speech crackdown
2 hours