Audio By Carbonatix
Ghana’s fight against corruption has reached a critical juncture, with calls for the removal of Special Prosecutor Kissi Agyebeng and the possible dissolution of the Office of the Special Prosecutor (OSP), prompting an urgent examination of the office’s performance and impact.
The primary objective of our research was to analyze corruption and corruption-related cases tried in Ghana’s courts and their conviction rates in the Fourth Republic (1992-2025).
This comes at a time when several notable individuals, including politicians from both sides, are calling for the removal of Kissi Agyebeng as Special Prosecutor and possible dissolution of the Office, claiming that the Office is not fit for purpose.
Our research revealed that, until the establishment of the Office of the Special Prosecutor (OSP), Ghana had not prosecuted any individual or entity specifically for corruption and corruption-related offences.
These offences are defined under various provisions of the Criminal Offences Act, 1960 (Act 29), including sections on bribery, extortion, misuse of public office, and electoral corruption, as well as Section 92(2) of the Public Procurement Act, 2003 (Act 663), which covers procurement-related offenses.
Prosecutions have occurred for offences such as causing financial loss to the state, misapplication of funds, stealing, and defrauding by false pretences.
In this context, the study classified these offences as part of the broader category of corruption and corruption-related cases prosecuted since the inception of the Fourth Republic.
Our analysis focused on concluded cases involving 47 individuals charged with corruption-related offences in Ghana from 1992 to the present (see Appendix).
It compared conviction rates during the period. The findings indicate that, since Kissi Agyebeng assumed office as Special Prosecutor in the last five years, he has achieved an 88% conviction rate (see Figure 1).

In contrast, over the past 33 years, the state (AG and EOCO combined) has achieved only a 44% conviction rate (Figure 1).
On average, the Kissi Agyebeng-led OSP has an annual conviction rate that is roughly 2.7 times higher than the entire State’s (AG and EOCO combined) conviction rate over the period. In other words, the Kissi Agyebeng-led OSP is securing convictions at a rate that is almost 3 times faster than the other state agencies.
Should Kissi Agyebeng be removed or should the OSP be scrapped? The numbers say NO.
“Throughout history, it has been the inaction of those who could have acted, the indifference of those who should have known better, the silence of the voice of justice when it mattered most, that has made it possible for evil to triumph.” - Haile Selassie
Writers' Email:
Latest Stories
-
Mahama avoiding expensive jet rentals by using brother’s aircraft – Gov’t
27 minutes -
All service contracts at Accra International Airport to be held to high delivery standards -Transport Minister warns
36 minutes -
Frequent breakdown of presidential jet forced interim use of brother’s aircraft – Felix Ofosu Kwakye
39 minutes -
Mother calls for thorough probe into daughter’s death at Adawso
50 minutes -
World Bank Group MD to visit Ghana and Liberia
51 minutes -
Automated Road Traffic Law set for passage by end of March
58 minutes -
Ghana to use automated technology to catch traffic offenders in real-time
1 hour -
Two robbery suspects killed as police dismantle gang on Obuasi–Dunkwa highway
1 hour -
Mahama’s use of brother’s jet not permanent, it’s due to lack of reliable state aircraft – Felix Ofosu Kwakye
2 hours -
GACL terminates Fixed Base Operation agreement with McDan Aviation over persistent debt
2 hours -
‘What exactly is the problem if Mahama uses his brother’s jet?’ – Kwakye Ofosu asks critics
2 hours -
I’ll be surprised if Ghanaians think Mahama using his brother’s jet comes at no cost to the state – Asafo-Adjei
3 hours -
PassionAir announces Kumasi route disruptions, apologises to passengers
3 hours -
Police dismantle armed robbery gang on Obuasi–Dunkwa highway
3 hours -
Ghana could face security risks amid international intelligence cooperation – Bosome Freho MP warns
3 hours
