Audio By Carbonatix
The Member of Parliament for South Dayi, Rockson Nelson Dafeamekpor, has urged the Special Prosecutor, Kissi Agyebeng, to reconsider his position on the publication of assets declared by public office holders.
Speaking on Accra-based TV3 on Saturday, June, Mr Dafeamekpor insisted that the publication of assets is a necessary step towards transparency and is supported by Article 286 of the 1992 Constitution.
“So, I think Kissi got it absolutely wrong. Being the Special Prosecutor, he should be the first advocate, the first disciple for publication. So, he is wrong,” Mr Dafeamekpor stated.
His remarks were in direct response to the Special Prosecutor’s position at a high-level conference on Ghana’s anti-corruption framework, where he argued against publishing the assets of public office holders, saying it could expose them to unnecessary public attention and possible attacks.
“I do not and I will not add my voice to calls for the publication of asset for public scrutiny. In our experience, it will be unhelpful and would nearly subject public officers to inordinate public curiosity and a spectre of the real likelihood of reprisal attacks against their asset,” the Special Prosecutor said.
However, Mr Dafeamekpor challenged this, saying the Constitution’s language clearly points to public accountability.
“How can the Constitution provide for the declaration of assets and deny us from seeing the nature of those assets?” he asked.
He further explained that Article 286 demands openness. “By the sheer nature of the language, when you declare, you are opening it up publicly; that is why it is called declaration. So, you can’t declare and put it in a closet,” he added.
Mr Dafeamekpor also pointed out that Parliament has a responsibility to provide legal backing for the asset declaration process, admitting that more should have been done over the years.
“That is why Parliament has been blamed for not coming out with legislation to give flesh to this,” he said. However, he assured that work is ongoing to address the gap. “We have designed a Private Members’ Bill, but government says hold on, we are sponsoring a larger bill for this. It is not only about assets, it is about liabilities.”
“One of the cardinal principles of reading a constitution is to read it as a whole… The principle of the 1992 Constitution is about accountability and transparency. We may be having difficulties with implementation, but you must be accountable to the people,” he said.
Latest Stories
-
We appeal to Ghanaians for patience as we replace more transformers – Energy Minister
3 minutes -
Power stability has improved since 2025 compared to 2024 – Jinapor
10 minutes -
Akosombo substation fire should never have happened – Ben Boakye
14 minutes -
Savannah region: Yazori Chief issues election boycott threat over underdevelopment concerns
19 minutes -
Backbone of economy in pain – Minority warns of collapse in worker morale
23 minutes -
Ghana Jazz Orchestra clocks in on International Jazz Day
29 minutes -
M-CARE’s first steering committee meeting targets chronic and mental health care integration in Ghana
29 minutes -
Bank of Ghana in 2025: Financially impaired but operationally resilient
38 minutes -
Fixing Akosombo does not end dumsor; energy crisis predates incident — Miracles Aboagye
38 minutes -
NAIMOS dawn operation leads to arrest of 49 suspected illegal miners after ambush on taskforce in Ahanta West
41 minutes -
Energy sector woes stem from political interference, not leadership failure — Kofi Bentil
60 minutes -
Communication around power outages has been ‘insincere’— Kofi Bentil
1 hour -
President Mahama breaks ground for modern 24-hour market in Asesewa
2 hours -
Video: Daniel Kofi-Kyereh ranks Andre Ayew above Essien and Appiah in blind ranking game
2 hours -
Mensa Otabil launches new book, ‘Leading the Church’, emphasizes governance and leadership transition
4 hours