Audio By Carbonatix
The Embassy of Ghana in Washington D.C. is expected to reopen on Thursday, May 29, resuming full consular services after a temporary closure due to a major corruption scandal.
It was shut down on May 26 as part of a restructuring and systems overhaul after uncovering an IT breach which allowed a staff member to redirect applicants in a fraudulent scheme for personal benefits.
A statement released by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Tuesday, May 27, said, “A team of seasoned diplomats led by an astute diplomat from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs has been tasked to run the Mission to ensure a total systems overhaul, restore integrity in the Embassy’s operations and complete ongoing structural reforms.”
Additionally, “an Information Technology (IT) team has already been deployed to reconfigure the website and payment platforms to do away with all unofficial and unauthorised links associated with the IT system or the Embassy”.
The matter has been referred to the Attorney-General for possible prosecution and the recovery of misappropriated funds.
Additionally, the Auditor-General has been tasked with conducting a full forensic audit to determine the total financial loss to the state.
While acknowledging the inconvenience caused to Ghanaian nationals and other applicants seeking consular services, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs emphasised that the drastic measures were necessary to restore integrity and accountability within Ghana's diplomatic missions abroad.
Background
The temporary shutdown aimed to address damning findings from a special audit team that uncovered fraudulent activities at the diplomatic mission.
According to statements from the ministry, a locally recruited IT officer, Fred Kwarteng, allegedly created an unauthorised link on the embassy's website.
This link redirected applicants for visa and passport services to his private company, Ghana Travel Consultants (GTC), where unapproved fees ranging from $29.75 to $60 were charged and deposited into his personal account. Investigations suggest this scheme operated undetected for at least five years.
In response to the scandal, all Foreign Affairs Ministry staff posted to the Washington D.C. embassy were recalled to Accra.
The embassy's IT department was dissolved, and all locally recruited staff were suspended pending further investigation.
Below is the statement.
Latest Stories
-
Dual citizenship: A privilege or a dangerous illusion?
11 minutes -
President Mahama announces road construction projects in Zongo communities
20 minutes -
SA officials claim only 10 of nearly 300 Ghanaian migrants repatriated were legally in the country
31 minutes -
Volta MMDCEs demand extension of Ghana Card registration for school children
34 minutes -
WHO urges ceasefire in Congo to contain Ebola as cases surge
35 minutes -
New head of Hamas’ military wing killed in Gaza City strikes, Israel saysÂ
36 minutes -
Dozens killed in Lebanon as Israeli troops expand ground campaignÂ
41 minutes -
Rights group accuses UAE of training Colombian mercenaries for Sudan’s warÂ
1 hour -
DR Congo appeals to FIFA for World Cup ticket refunds amid Ebola travel restrictionsÂ
1 hour -
CUTS lauds BoG on suspension of proposed MTN new charges
1 hour -
Photos: Eid al-Adha observed in joy, prayer
1 hour -
Casa Royal joins The Build Project as official tiles partner
1 hour -
Photos: Eid al-Adha celebration draws thousands to Independence Square
2 hours -
Mahama urges Ghanaians to uphold peace and reject extremism at Eid al-Adha
3 hours -
Kobbie Mainoo should be representing Ghana – Kurt OkrakuÂ
3 hours