Audio By Carbonatix
Administrative challenges within the Ghana Education Service (GES) have come under scrutiny after newly recruited teachers accused the institution of losing their employment documents, delaying staff IDs and salaries for more than a year.
The teachers picketed the GES headquarters on Tuesday, claiming their documents could not be traced at the national office despite assurances from district and regional authorities that they had been submitted.
The situation, they say, has prevented them from being placed on the payroll even after receiving financial clearance and working in schools.
One protesting teacher alleged that officials provided conflicting explanations regarding their status.
“The regional office said they sent our documents, but when we came to the headquarters, we were told our documents could not be found,” he said.
Some affected teachers also claim they were told their clearance had expired and they should restart the recruitment process, a development they described as administrative negligence.
The teachers questioned why newly recruited personnel from December 2025 had already received staff IDs and salaries while earlier recruits remained unpaid.
They also raised concerns about possible weaknesses in coordination between GES offices, calling for accountability and urgent intervention.
The protest adds to ongoing public debate about efficiency within state institutions and the need for reforms in Ghana’s public sector employment processes.
Latest Stories
-
Walewale NDC executives endorse youth concerns after protest, urge dialogue
2 minutes -
OSP brouhaha: Common sense over legal reasoning
2 minutes -
Nurses to receive medical backpacks under Free Primary Healthcare programme
9 minutes -
Prisons officers complete motorbike training with Police MTTD Riders Unit in Accra
20 minutes -
Sachet water price hike: Defying government is economic sabotage
26 minutes -
Resultant crimes involving moral turpitude of birth tourism and false dependency tax claims
30 minutes -
Gov’t ring-fences GH¢1.2bn for free primary health care rollout
32 minutes -
Prempeh College hosts impactful “becoming a man” summit on modern masculinity
40 minutes -
Sylvia Sarfoa Ansong emerges as a fresh face in Ghana’s evolving advertising industry
42 minutes -
Jury system should be reformed, not abolished — Deputy Attorney General
50 minutes -
Supreme Court @150: Chief Justice calls for faster, closer and more accessible Justice delivery
52 minutes -
From community kiosks to specialised care: How Mahama’s Free Primary Healthcare will be rolled out
53 minutes -
‘Coaching is not an add-on but a strategic enabler of leadership’ – Dean, GIMPA Business School
55 minutes -
Number of women suffering strokes rising – Rev Baidoo warns
1 hour -
Ghana, Japan launch $1.5m projects to advance peace, AI, and health innovation
1 hour