Audio By Carbonatix
Former Chairman of Parliament’s Public Accounts Committee, James Klutse Avedzi, has cautioned against treating Auditor-General reports as infallible, stressing the need for proper verification and parliamentary scrutiny before conclusions are drawn.
Responding to concerns about public trust in the Auditor-General’s findings, particularly in light of corrections such as the alleged “transpositional error” in Frank Kpodo’s case, Mr Klutse Avedzi said the reports, while authoritative, are still produced by humans and therefore subject to errors.
“The Auditor-General is a human being and can make mistakes. It is always better to cross-check and verify again,” he said.
He explained that under the constitutional process, Auditor-General reports are submitted to Parliament, where they are examined and debated, particularly by the Public Accounts Committee, before final conclusions are reached.
According to him, this parliamentary scrutiny is the appropriate stage for addressing inconsistencies and ensuring accuracy before the public forms conclusions based on audit findings.
Mr Klutse Avedzi cautioned that when media organisations or individuals interpret and publish audit findings before parliamentary review, there is a risk of misrepresentation and reputational harm.
“These reports are meant to be properly reviewed by Parliament and its committees. It is not for individual media houses or opinions to conclude on them before that process is complete,” he said.
He added that following the proper parliamentary process would ensure that errors or discrepancies are addressed in a structured manner, helping to preserve institutional credibility and public trust.
“In that way, the integrity of the Auditor-General is also protected,” he noted.
Latest Stories
-
“Give Me My Tithe and Let Me Go”: A Quiet Uprising in the House of Order
3 minutes -
Police rescue abducted girl from Agormanya; suspect arrested
9 minutes -
OSP was born as a ‘political tool’ for NPP – Edudzi Tameklo
19 minutes -
NDC will deliver on Upper West development promises – Asiedu Nketia
21 minutes -
Asiedu Nketia credits internal reconciliation strategy for NDC gains in Upper West
28 minutes -
Ghana, Lesotho deepen procurement cooperation through study visit
46 minutes -
The last refuge: Saving the Tano’s sacred crocodile
1 hour -
Energy committee urges finance ministry to expedite financial clearance for GCMC expansion
1 hour -
‘Adamus is for Ghanaians’ – Mining firm refutes claims of secret foreign leases
1 hour -
Adamus reaffirms commitment to Nzema communities amid concession concerns
2 hours -
Eight coaches in five years: Kotoko’s struggle for stability deepens
2 hours -
Rikair donates critical medical equipment to GMTF to support lifesaving care
2 hours -
Mahama pledges infrastructure overhaul for Bole Nursing College
2 hours -
Christ the King School goes solar in landmark green energy breakthrough
2 hours -
Meta to start capturing employee mouse movements, keystrokes for AI training data
2 hours