
Audio By Carbonatix
The neglect of uncompleted projects either by successive governments and change of ministerial portfolios is a worrying phenomenon in Ghana, Mr Kwesi Ahwoi, Food and Agriculture Minister has indicated.He expressed the sentiment at the commissioning of a GH¢686,000 rehabilitated laboratory for the University of Cape Coast (UCC) School of Agriculture in Cape Coast on Wednesday. The project took seven years to be completed.Mr Ahwoi was disappointed that in spite of the 1992 constitutional provision in Article 35 clause 7 that Governments shall continue to execute projects and programmes commenced by the previous administration, it was not being adhered to.The Minister said many a time, politicians ignored it in their “pursuit of their politically parochial, biased and disjointed developmental agenda” and abandoned very important projects because they were unrestrained by any enforcement mandate.On the UCC School of Agriculture project, he said it brought to the fore “the sloppiness with which we execute most contracts in the country when we award contracts on grounds of patronage rather than competence”.He called for the continuity of all projects to facilitate the development process of the country.Explaining the circumstances towards the delay of the project, he noted that it was first awarded in 2003 to Messrs Kenco Limited and had to be terminated in 2005 to be re-awarded to the same contractor and taken away again in 2007 on the grounds of non performance.Mr Ahwoi was full of praise to Messrs Melgrep Company, a Ghanaian contracting firm, for its professionalism and business drive and also thanked the contractor of the project for executing on schedule, which had enabled the School to have a well equipped laboratory for enhanced performance.He said government would continue to pursue programmes that would bring development and stressed that it had been projected that the Youth in Agriculture Programme would this year create 197,000 jobs in addition to the 47,000 it created in 2009.The Minister said the food basket of the country had contributed significantly to the downward trend in inflation in the country, adding that food inflation dropped from 15.4% to 6.1% in June this year, the lowest in the last 16 years.Source: GNA
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Hit South African show gets the world talking about polygamy and cheating
1 hour -
This Saturday on Prime Insight: Kennedy Agyapong controversy and utility tariff hikes
2 hours -
This Saturday on Newsfile: Torkornoo case, Larry Dogbe jail, $208 million meth bust and ‘Ken Must Go’
2 hours -
US conducts strikes on Iran after attack on cargo ship
3 hours -
Madonna was ‘jealous of Kylie’ – and more things we learned in her Graham Norton interview
3 hours -
Senegal score their way to last 32 contention
3 hours -
Dembele hits terrific treble as France top group
3 hours -
Spider-Man to The Odyssey: 10 of the best films to watch this July
4 hours -
Venezuela earthquakes kill 920 people as families desperate for news
4 hours -
Europe’s deadly heatwave breaks German record and halts public events
4 hours -
Mother dies saving daughter in Venezuela earthquakes
5 hours -
DR Congo takes Rwanda to international court over decades of conflict
5 hours -
Health authorities in Kumasi alarmed over sharp increase in synthetic drug abuse
5 hours -
Residents count losses as heavy rains wreak havoc in Vicolis, Amamorley Estates
5 hours -
Cancer Support Network Foundation donates GHC100,000 to Accra Regional Hospital
6 hours