Audio By Carbonatix
Over 600 teachers in their final year of study leave at the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology are protesting the removal of their names from the payroll of the Ghana Education Service.
The teachers say they are not signing their posting letters until the GES restores their names on the roll. They also want salaries owed them paid immediately.
The action is said to have been taken after external auditors reported that letters authorizing study-leave for some of the teachers were not genuine.
But the teachers have dismissed the audit report as false, and are threatening a massive demonstration.
Joy FM’s Ashanti Regional Correspondent, Elton John Brobbey, reported that the teachers say although they petitioned the Ghana National Association of Teachers (GNAT) to intervene in the matter, nothing had yet been done.
The KNUST branch president of GNAT, Samuel Obeng, said the government will be the greatest loser if the situation is allowed to degenerate.
Ghana has a deficit of 80,000 teachers, and that if the teachers were to divert to other sectors, the country’s educational sector will suffer.
Source: Joy News/Ghana
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
-
Atlantic Lithium submits revised mining lease to Parliament
48 minutes -
Mahama receives CRC’s report, implementation committee starts work next yearÂ
1 hour -
BoG, SEC move to regulate crypto as Parliament passes Virtual Assets Law
2 hours -
Electroland’s Akyɛdeɛ Kɛseɛ promo rewards over 10,000 customers nationwide
2 hours -
ElectroChem names Francis Buamah as new CEO to drive next phase of growth
2 hours -
448 conflict hotspots identified – Interior Minister
2 hours -
EC bosses face one-term rule as CRC pushes firewall against political influence
2 hours -
Supreme Court numbers under the knife as Constitution Review Committee proposes cap
3 hours -
Okada legal, but roads not ready – Transport Minister warns
3 hours -
Gov’t to roll out dedicated traffic signs for motor riders
3 hours -
Ghana to launch sea transport service linking Togo, Benin and Nigeria
4 hours -
Jimenez penalty earns Fulham scrappy 1-0 home win over Forest
4 hours -
Uganda coach Put unfazed by Tunisia’s unbeaten streak
4 hours -
Royal Christmas cards have a touchy-feely look this year
4 hours -
Amakye Dede, Reggie Rockstone and Amapiano Invasion to headline SOHO’s December shows
4 hours
