Audio By Carbonatix
The Auditor-General Johnson Akuamoah-Asiedu has called for stricter verification of asset declarations by public officials, questioning how authorities can confirm the accuracy of the information submitted.
Speaking after receiving President John Mahama’s asset declaration forms on Tuesday, February 17, he raised concerns about whether officials fully disclose their financial and property holdings.
He noted that while they list their assets, there is no way to verify whether all have been declared.
“If you say you have ten bank accounts and you bring it to us, how are we to be sure that indeed it is only ten bank accounts that you have?” he asked. “If you say you have two buildings, what can we do to ensure that it is exactly the two buildings that you have?”
The Auditor-General explained that his office only checks whether forms are completed properly, ensuring that officials do not leave blank spaces or fail to include bank balances.
Some, he revealed, list their banks but do not indicate the balances, requiring the Audit Service to contact them for corrections.
“We will open it to see exactly what entries you have made,” he stated. “What we are looking at is whether you have not left any blank spaces, whether you have not left your bank balances.”
Mr Akuamoah-Asiedu also backed calls for asset declarations to be made public, arguing that it would increase transparency and allow the public to track changes in officials’ wealth over time.
“If you submit your assets and declaration forms, we should be able to publish it freely,” he said. “And the time that you are leaving office, too, we will publish it to see the changes that have happened ever since you started in office.”
His comments followed President Mahama’s public submission of his asset declaration forms, a move he described as a step toward greater openness in governance.
The President urged all public office holders to comply with the law and warned that any appointee who fails to declare their assets by March 31, 2025, would face “severe sanctions, not excluding removal from office.”
President Mahama also called for constitutional reforms to strengthen the asset declaration process, proposing that declarations be made public both before and after an official’s tenure.
The Auditor-General welcomed the proposal, stating that his office would support efforts to improve verification and transparency in asset declarations.
Latest Stories
-
Fix generation, transmission and distribution together to end dumsor – IES analyst to gov’t
8 minutes -
GAEC hosts major international SAPPHIRE workshop to boost cancer treatment capacity in Africa
9 minutes -
Youth entrepreneurs get machinery, skills under YEFFA programme
12 minutes -
ICC awards $8.4 million in compensation to victims of al-Qaeda-linked leader in Mali
16 minutes -
“Current dumsor is very unbearable” – Oforikrom MP
29 minutes -
Electrochem needs govt-MIIF support to unlock potential
31 minutes -
Next JoyBusiness Round Table discussion comes off April 30, 2026
36 minutes -
President Mahama cuts sod for new Airport concourse project to link terminal 2 and 3
40 minutes -
African journalists face rising pressure but show strong commitment to nation-building — Study shows
45 minutes -
Over 300 women equipped to break into digital trade as Click-to-Cargo Programme ends in Accra
49 minutes -
Culture, corruption fuel Ghana’s galamsey crisis — Study reveals
49 minutes -
“Buck stops at the top” — Minority calls for Energy Minister’s removal over power challenges
58 minutes -
Tiler in critical condition after alleged self-harm incident in Mankessim
1 hour -
Couple held at gunpoint as armed men demolish mosque at Millennium City
1 hour -
IndigoHomes’ Greenwich Park construction advances as founder & CEO embarks on site visit
1 hour