
Audio By Carbonatix
A security consultant has questioned the rationale behind charging applicants in the ongoing recruitment exercise into Ghana’s security services, suggesting that the fees may be unjustified given the limited costs incurred by the government.
Speaking on Joy News’ The Pulse on Thursday, March 12, Richard Kumadoe argued that the government bears little to no financial burden in the process, yet applicants are required to pay significant sums.
“What we have said is, why should they be charging the applicants in the first place? If you look at the methodology, what has the government incurred? What is the cost of government in this whole recruitment process? So why should people pay in the first place?” he asked.
Mr Kumadoe explained that the application process is entirely online, with applicants purchasing forms digitally and covering their own costs to travel to document verification centres.
“When it came to the second stage, which is document examination, applicants travelled using their own means to get to the centres, and their documents were examined. For the aptitude test, the government did not conduct mass recruitment to take the test remotely,” he noted.
He added that the government’s direct financial involvement is minimal, limited mostly to vetting, background checks, and interviews, none of which require applicants to be funded by the state.
Mr Kumadoe further stated that charging applicants is not unique to the current government. “For many years, the government has charged people. They’ve taken money from them, not just this regime. In the NPP regime, they were charging people, taking money from them. So I agree that people should not be charged.”
On the question of refunds for applicants who were disqualified or affected by the controversial process, he suggested that clarity should come from the Interior Minister.
His remarks come amid growing calls from the Minority in Parliament and civil society for transparency, accountability, and possible refunds in the recruitment exercise, which has seen nearly half a million applicants competing for only about 5,000 positions.
Latest Stories
-
Ex-G4S guard jailed in UK over £117,200 bank fraud after four-year stay in Ghana
8 seconds -
‘Stop the propaganda and release GARID funds to save lives’ – Oppong Nkrumah to gov’t
5 minutes -
Supreme Court at 150: Prof. Bondzi-Simpson traces evolution of Ghana’s judiciary from colonial era to constitutional democracy
46 minutes -
Gov’t has spent more on flood control under GARID in 2 years than NPP did in 5 – Atta Issah
49 minutes -
Prof. Bondzi-Simpson calls for deeper reflection on 150 years of Ghana’s judicial evolution
51 minutes -
MUSIGA sympathises with flood victims, urges Ghanaians to stay safe
1 hour -
AMA declares one-month free refuse collection exercise in Accra
2 hours -
Mahama swears in Dr Pamela Graham as Ghana’s first female Auditor-General
2 hours -
Government launches dedicated GETFund support for learners with special educational needs
2 hours -
Dangerous US heatwave looms over 4 July holiday, World Cup and Swift wedding
2 hours -
Ghana Armed Forces to brief nation on nationwide flood mitigation exercise
2 hours -
Police arrest 24 in major anti-crime swoop in Ashanti Region
2 hours -
Youth Model Parliament by GYEA unveils 2026 nominees
2 hours -
Ghana National Council of Metropolitan Chicago launches GhanaFest® 2026 with historic first-ever Ghana flag-raising ceremony
2 hours -
Public health officers push for face masks and handwashing amid post-flood risks
2 hours