Audio By Carbonatix
The Executive Director of the Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA), Sulemana Braimah, says the Fourth Estate investigation into the government’s Big Push initiative is not intended to embarrass the administration but to promote accountability.
Speaking on Adom FM's Dwaso Nsem on March 25, Mr. Braimah stressed that the work of the Fourth Estate is guided by the public interest.
“What we are doing is not to humiliate or put the NDC government or the Roads Minister, Kwame Governs Agbodza, in a bad light. We will make all the documents public,” he stated.
He explained that the goal is to ensure transparency and encourage honest governance.
“All we are saying is that the nation is for all of us, and if things go well, it is to the benefit of all of us,” he added.
Mr. Braimah, however, questioned what he described as inconsistencies in the position of some government officials on sole sourcing and procurement practices.
“It shouldn’t be that when a party is in opposition, they will say things nicely and convince people they will do things better,” he said.
He further challenged claims suggesting that earlier criticisms of sole sourcing were not meant to imply wrongdoing.
“They are now saying that when they were raising concerns under the NPP, they didn’t mean to say it was a bad thing or crime. So what exactly were they saying?” he asked.
According to him, national development requires honesty and consistency in public discourse.
“For the nation to grow, we must all be honest and truthful with ourselves,” he stressed.
Mr. Braimah also raised concerns about figures presented in relation to the Big Push programme, questioning their accuracy and coherence.
“So even if that is true, when you subtract 14 from 81 billion, they gave to us, do you get 54?” he queried.
His comments come amid ongoing debate over the Big Push initiative following the Fourth Estate’s report, which has sparked public scrutiny of road contracts and procurement processes.
Meanwhile, the Roads and Highways Minister, Kwame Governs Agbodza, has defended the programme, stating that the government took a deliberate decision not to abandon ongoing projects inherited from the previous administration.
According to him, some stalled projects, including the Ofankor and Kasoa-Winneba roads, have been incorporated into the Big Push framework to ensure continuity.
He added that the projects are distributed across the country, with some divided into multiple segments to improve efficiency and execution.
Latest Stories
-
Host communities in Tarkwa appeal to gov’t to renew Gold Fields contract
3 minutes -
Annual disaster: Resolving accra’s flooding crisis
12 minutes -
Serena Williams, 44, to return to action in Queen’s doubles
14 minutes -
Upcoming NPP Primary: Asante Akyem South Youth urge Eric Amofa to contest
17 minutes -
Keegan reveals stage four cancer diagnosis
19 minutes -
TOR posts GHS 1.24bn profit in 2025 as SIGA hails ‘historic’ financial turnaround
20 minutes -
Record-holder Milner retires after 24-year career
21 minutes -
I leave Liverpool exactly where it belongs – Slot
27 minutes -
Remand order against me ‘surprising, bad but not political’ – Abronye
30 minutes -
Abusive passengers could be blacklisted from all airlines under new proposal
42 minutes -
Fancy Gadam, Rudeboy draw massive crowd at Tamale concert
43 minutes -
Myres Odonkor Junior claims GH¢100K as 1v1 Africa brings football fever to Accra
44 minutes -
Motorists urged to demand ECOWAS Brown Card insurance certificates
45 minutes -
Chairman Big Aidoo donates 100 desks to Humjibre School to improve learning conditions
47 minutes -
Ghanaians weren’t told the full truth – Minority accuses NDC of misleading public on Family Values Bill
50 minutes