Audio By Carbonatix
Information Minister, Kojo Oppong Nkrumah, has said the Executive arm of government has not been engaged on plans to build a new chamber for Parliament
“From the Executive perspective, I am not aware that the Executive has been engaged on this idea,” he said.
This disclosure contradicts a previous declaration by Speaker of Parliament, Prof. Mike Ocquaye, that President Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has agreed to attend a sod cutting ceremony for the new chamber.
“The President, in principle, has actually agreed to come and cut the sod the moment we are ready. So you can see that there is a lot of goodwill for this project,” Prof Ocquaye had said at a media briefing on the project.
He also revealed at the media briefing that the Finance Ministry has allocated some funds for the project that seeks to expand the parliamentary chamber.
Controversial chamber
Parliament is under pressure to justify its decision to build a new House, expanding the 275-seater chamber to 450 seats.
Architectural designs outdoored by the Parliamentary Service Board last Friday sparked wide criticism on social media.
The Speaker of Parliament has been described as out-of-touch while the project is seen by many as profligate.
Even MPs are demanding answers from Parliamentary Leaders, insisting they were not consulted. Several on both sides of the House have publicly kicked against the plan.
A plan is afoot to march to Parliament next week to express outrage. The Majority Leader has said the plan is not conclusive.
President must intervene
Minority MP for Tamale North, Alhassan Suhuyini, wants the President to intervene to quell the raging controversy over the project.
“It is government business and so government should not even think of that idea of bringing it to Parliament. Let us target our government,” he said.
Meanwhile, both the Minority and Majority leadership are billed for a press briefing on the matter, Thursday.
Latest Stories
-
African Union summit clouded by Saudi-UAE rivalry in Horn of Africa
1 hour -
No more excuses – NCA rolls out stricter mobile service standards
1 hour -
Call drops must fall below 1% – NCA raises bar for telcos
2 hours -
China to implement zero tariffs on imports from 53 African countries
4 hours -
Tunisian police detain opposition figure Olfa Hamdi at airport
4 hours -
US deports 9 to Cameroon despite court protections, NYT says
4 hours -
Mali renews Barrick Mining’s Loulo license for 10 more years
4 hours -
Gender pay gap won’t close for another 30 years, warns UK trade unions group
5 hours -
No free pass for internet platforms on child safety, Starmer says
5 hours -
Andrew’s time as trade envoy should be investigated, says Vince Cable
5 hours -
‘Trump will be gone in three years’: Top Democrats try to reassure Europe
5 hours -
Cuban cigar festival called off as US blockade worsens energy crisis
5 hours -
Head of Dubai-based ports giant quits after Epstein links revealed
5 hours -
Nigeria’s state-owned NNPC records $4.2 billion after-tax profit in 2025
6 hours -
French tourist found dead in Chad after falling off cliff
6 hours
