Audio By Carbonatix
The history of Ghanaian governance is littered with the carcasses of "Special Initiatives," grandiose titles that promised a paradise of development but delivered only a desert of debt.
We watched, with a mix of hope and eventual heartbreak, as the Akufo-Addo-Bawumia administration turned "1-Village-1-Dam" into a collection of dugouts and "One Million Per Constituency" into a phantom ledger. The Zongo Development Fund and 1-District 1-Factory, conceived in the womb of political brilliance, were ultimately strangled by the hands of administrative opaqueness and the massive waste of public resources.
We remember the Savannah Accelerated Development Authority (SADA) renamed the Northern Development Authority (NDA). We remember the "hope" sold to our brothers and sisters in the North. Where is that hope today? It has evaporated into the heat of the savannah, leaving behind only the bitter taste of broken promises.
This is the heavy, dark shadow that looms over the current administration. It is why voices of conscience, such as Franklin Cudjoe, warn that the Special Initiatives under President John Dramani Mahama risk becoming yet another expensive exercise in futility.
I have argued differently. I have maintained that this time, it must be different. We must harvest the lessons of the past to fertilise the soil of the future. These initiatives should not be mere slogans; they must be the constitutional anchors of this administration, the legacy projects that define a generation.
We are now in March 2026. The honeymoon is over. The mandate, granted with such fervour over a year ago, is no longer a fresh document but a ticking clock.
From this moment forward, I am turning a searching, clinical accountability light onto the pillars of the NDC manifesto. I am moving beyond the rhetoric to the reality.
My focus is unyielding. I am coming for the facts on:
- The One Million Coders Programme
- The Youth Apprentice Programme
- EdwumaWura Programme
- The Ghana Labour Export Programme
- Nkukor Nketenkete
- The Women’s World Bank
To those in the high offices of implementation: consider this your summons. We will no longer settle for glossy brochures and curated photo ops. The Ghanaian citizen demands, and I shall extract the truth.
Who is monitoring the monitors? Who is leading these initiatives, and do they possess the integrity to match their authority?
How much of the widow’s mite and the taxpayer’s sweat has been poured into these coffers? We demand to see the milestones, not just the maps. We demand the deliverables, not just the dreams. Where are the beneficiaries? Not only the political foot soldiers, but also the genuine youth, the struggling mothers, and the displaced workers.
What impact story can be told? If a life has been transformed, show us the person. If a factory is humming, show us the smoke. If a coder is employed, show us the code.
We are advancing toward the second year of this four-year journey. We refuse to wait until the eleventh hour to ask the difficult questions. To wait until the third year is to invite the same rot that consumed the initiatives of the past.
Is what was promised in the heat of the campaign what is being delivered in the cool of the office?
How is the government of John Dramani Mahama distinguishing itself from the failures of its predecessor? Is this a genuine departure from the status quo, or is it merely the same old wine in a more sophisticated bottle?
The time for "strategic patience" has expired. From this day, I shall pick these initiatives apart, one by one. I will scrutinise the budgets, audit the outcomes, and verify the claims. Accountability is not a threat; it is a moral imperative. If these programmes are indeed the "legacy" of this administration, they must be able to withstand the heat of the sun.
To the implementers: if you have managed these resources with the sacredness they deserve, you have nothing to fear. But if these initiatives are being used as a conduit for patronage or a shield for incompetence, be warned. The light is coming. And in the brilliance of that light, there will be no place for the shadows of waste to hide.
The citizens of Ghana are watching. They are no longer spectators in their own governance; they are the ultimate auditors. And I shall be their voice.
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