
Audio By Carbonatix
Member of Parliament for North Tongu, Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa is calling for a full-scale parliamentary probe into Ghana’s spending at the ongoing Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON).
He tells Luv Sports he will table that when the house resumes next month.
In the heat of Ghana’s economic crisis, the government approved an amount of $8.5 million presented by the GFA as budget for the Black Stars at the ongoing AFCON.
Ablakwa hints that though the Finance Minister instructed the Controller and Accountant General to release US$5,071,840.36 as part payment of the budget, the Controller advanced in excess of US$6,946,450.00 equivalent to GH₵82, 596,763.73.
This is some GH₵22 million more than the instructed release of GH₵60, 305,717.80.
Speaking in an interview on Luv FM in Kumasi, Ablakwa expressed shock at how such financial recklessness will occur in a country that is going through debt restructuring.
"The level of financial recklessness is unbelievable, the GFA blew GH₵27.9m before we entered 2024, then as soon as we entered 2024 for AFCON, even before we took off they had blown GH₵15m and another GH₵14m they say on per diems," he mentioned.
"If you look at documents that have per-diems, per diems and honorarium are supposed to mean the same thing but in this breakdown, they have provided there is a separate figure for per diem and then another separate figure for honorarium. It’s just a free for all and it is unbelievable”.
Ablakwa who is also a ranking member on the Foreign Affairs Committee of Parliament, says there must be a parliamentary probe when the house resumes on how monies were disbursed and spent at AFCON 2023.
"The recklessness is too much and that is why I insist that there ought to be a full-scale parliamentary probe. When the house resumes we are going to file a motion for a full-scale parliamentary enquiry and all those Ministers and public officials including those at the FA who think that they should rather insult me instead of accounting to the Ghanaian people on the thought processes that went into coming out with this budget," he continued.
"They need to tell us why they will at this time of unprecedented economic crisis come up with this staggering amount of $8.5m. They should know that all of them will be made to account and there will be sanctions, it’s just a matter of time."
Latest Stories
-
Bawumia donates relief items to June 29 flood victims
19 minutes -
ICC confirms Burkina Faso, Mali and Niger move to leave court
1 hour -
Switzerland beat Algeria for first World Cup knock out win in 88 years
1 hour -
A case for entrusting public sector waste management to the Ghana Armed Forces
2 hours -
Oil up slightly ahead of long US weekend as peace efforts hold
2 hours -
Ghana Platinum Excellence Award launched to honour institutions with over 20 years of impact
3 hours -
Floods are killing Ghana’s economy one traffic jam at a time – Prof Peter Quartey
3 hours -
Abu Jinapor calls for Mahama-Ramaphosa intervention as Ghana-South Africa diplomatic tensions deepen
3 hours -
We are wasting money – Prof Peter Quartey says Ghana is paying billions for failure to prevent floods
3 hours -
Mali creates state body to regulate artisanal gold trade
3 hours -
Air Force to investigate officer who called for Trump impeachment
3 hours -
National Day of Prayer and Thanksgiving an annual national observance, not a response to floods – Elvis Afriyie-Ankrah
3 hours -
India issues notice to Telegram, Signal on concerns over usernames, source says
4 hours -
You can’t trade lives for fiscal discipline – Oppong Nkrumah blasts government over flood deaths
4 hours -
Flood disaster must spur urgent action, government should fast-track relief – CPS
4 hours