Audio By Carbonatix
Chiefs from the Western Region are not pleased with the decision not to grant them 10 per cent of revenues expected to accrue from the Jubilee Oil Fields for development purposes.
Four Minority Members of Parliament had prayed the House to amend a portion of the Petroleum Revenue Management Bill to grant a request by the chiefs that 10 per cent of the oil revenues is lodged into a special account accessible only by the region for their own projects.
But the First Deputy Speaker of Parliament Doe Adjaho on Wednesday struck out the proposal by the four MPs and told Parliament the request could not be met because it contravenes some sections of the Standing Orders of Parliament, citing Standing Order 122(b) and 128 IV (b) as well as Article 108 of the 1992 Constitution.
President of Western Regional House of Chiefs, Awulae Attibrukusu III told Citi FM the chiefs would convene a meeting soon; “as early as possible” he noted, to “take collective decision” on their next line of action after parliament’s disappointment.
He remarked regretfully: “We were so surprised and so disappointed. The 10% that we are demanding are not for the people of the Western Region alone or for the chiefs in the Western Region. All that we are demanding is that the 10% should be lodged in a Western corridor [fund] to be used for developments in the area.”
He said the people of the Western Region have been “sidelined” for far too long. “If Ghana is a human being then you will say the Western Region would be the heart of the person, but if as a human being the heart that controls you is being manipulated or is not taken [good] care of, then where is your fate?”
Meanwhile Director of the Western Regional Coordinating Council, David Yaro told Myjoyonline.com last month it would be difficult for the government to meet the demand for 10 percent oil revenues.
“It’s not visible to say that we are giving you 10%...but what government can do is to skew development agenda of the country in favour of the Western Region, so that at the end of the day that 10% demand would have been met.”
Even though he acknowledged the effect the oil production will have on the region’s infrastructure like roads and hospitals, he was hopeful the government’s budget would give priority to the region when it comes to the allocation of projects.
Story by Isaac Essel/Myjoyonline.com/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
-
Barcelona Summit: Veep advances talks on agro-deal with GB Foods
12 minutes -
Eni, Partners sign deal to boost healthcare access in Western Region
39 minutes -
AfCFTA in Limbo?
56 minutes -
UK and France to lead defensive mission in Strait of Hormuz
59 minutes -
CHASS threatens to shut down schools as feeding negotiations end in deadlock
2 hours -
Ghana Stock Exchange ends week up as market cap surpasses GH¢266billion
2 hours -
Litina Travels launches “made in Ghana business expo” ahead of 2026 World Cup
3 hours -
157 sites disrupted – MTN CEO reveals massive scale of fibre cable sabotage
3 hours -
Nestle Ghana launches 2026 Milo U-13 Champions League.
4 hours -
Thursdays for the Black Stars: Gov’t institutionalises weekly updates on $30m World Cup fund
4 hours -
Saturday showdown: OSP powers and new health policy to dominate Prime Insight
5 hours -
Enimil Ashon: A Ghanaian would’ve taken NDC/NPP flag to space
5 hours -
‘Help enlist me into police service’ – Suspect in alleged armoured vehicle theft pleads in court
6 hours -
Carrick leaves door open for Rashford return
6 hours -
A moment of risk and opportunity: How two ceasefires could boost US-Iran talks
7 hours