
Audio By Carbonatix
The Auditor-General, Mr Richard Q. Quartey, has raised red flags over what he termed avoidable costs against the state in judgement debts.This followed the detection of the payment of GH¢189,562,747.00 in judgement debts in 2011, while GH¢26,805,441.00 was expended as compensation for land and other property.Mr Quartey has, therefore, recommended that the state surcharges all the government officials whose actions or inaction resulted in the imposition of judgement debts.That, he contends, would help minimise government expenditure on judgement debts.These formed part of his recommendations to the Speaker of Parliament in the “Report of the Auditor-General on the Public Accounts of Ghana (Consolidated Fund) for the year ended 2011”.Referring to his comments in the 2010 report on the issue of judgement debts, he said, “I reiterated my position that these debts could have been avoided if due care was taken by the public officials in the discharge of their duties.”Mr Quartey, therefore, urged the government to sensitise public officials whose negligence led to such losses “to exercise proper judgement in the course of their official duties”.He expressed worry that the government continued to incur huge expenditure on judgement debts in cases involving the failure of government officials to honour financial obligations, wrongful dismissal of government employees, reckless driving by public officers and molestations by security officers.The report mentioned some of the beneficiaries of judgement debt payments in 2011 as African Automobile, which per release letter B.223MESWHQ/3/11/02 was paid GH¢4,159,010.38 against GH¢8,379,124.71 paid in 2010 in respect of cost of vehicles and spare parts; Mr Alfred Agbesi Woyome, who was paid GH¢34,188,987.06 as final payment in respect of the rehabilitation of three stadia as against GH¢17,094,493.53 paid in 2010, and China Jilin International, which benefited from a GH¢12,566,888.49 judgement debt per release letter CJIECT B.159/1/10/JD.16, for non-payment for a library complex.It also mentioned the payment of GH¢488,280.00 as damages for breach of contract; GH¢20,000.00 to Mr J. W. S. Degraft Johnson as End-of-Service Benefits; GH¢269,406.76 to Modern Construction Ltd in respect of the renovation of Forestry Service Commission and GH¢4,569,593.50 to Trans Tema Power Ltd in respect of breach of power purchase agreement.
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
-
Africa pushes integrated health agenda ahead of One Health Summit in Lyon
13 minutes -
We own the strategy, its not head office decision – GCB MD positions bank as engine of Ghana’s economy
23 minutes -
No more waiting for head office – GCB boss pushes Ghana-first banking
44 minutes -
Mahama lauds Julius Debrah for shaping Kwahu Business Forum
58 minutes -
Why actors beg in difficulty – Patience Ozokwor on Nollywood financial struggles
1 hour -
Any man who apologises to woman deserves to suffer – Brymo
1 hour -
Nigerian artistes no longer put effort into making music – Omah Lay claims
2 hours -
‘I’m now skeptical about going into politics’ – Davido
2 hours -
Nigeria’s Seplat Energy resumes operations as oil workers halt strike action
2 hours -
Nigeria launches manhunt after abductions by bandits in northwest Zamfara
2 hours -
Kenya fuel executives resign as state probes supply chain irregularities
2 hours -
Senegal bans ministers from foreign travel as oil price rise bites
2 hours -
Nigerian army rescues 31 hostages after church attack
3 hours -
Spain’s huge pork industry seeks salvation from swine fever threat
3 hours -
Trump declares victory after rescue but threats to US operation in Iran still loom
3 hours