Audio By Carbonatix
Former Auditor-General, Daniel Yao Domelevo, has been appointed as a board member of the Global Fund representing West and Central Africa.
He will be serving on the Audit and Finance Committee of the Global Fund and will be joining 11 others to vote on issues brought before the board.
The board approved his appointment, together with the 11 others on the committee, on 4th May 2022.
The Global Fund is a financing institution which provides US$4 billion annually in support to countries including Ghana to fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria.
Daniel Domelevo appointed as a board member of Global Fund representing West & Central Africa
He will serve on, & be one of the 12 voting members of the Audit & Finance C'ttee of the board
The GF provides $4bn+ annually to countries (including Ghana) to fight AIDS, TB & Malaria pic.twitter.com/2VAmwY06he— DATANOMICS (@Datanomics_) July 7, 2022
President Akufo-Addo in March last year asked the then Auditor-General, Daniel Yaw Domelevo to proceed on retirement after he had just returned from a 167-day forced leave.
In a letter signed by Nana Asante Bediatuo, the Secretary to the President said “The attention of the President of the Republic has been drawn to records and documents made available to this Office by the Audit Service, that indicate that your date of birth is June 1, 1960, and that in accordance with article 199 (1) of the Constitution, your date of retirement as Auditor-General was June 1, 2020,” the letter said.
By extension, therefore, “the President is of the view that you have formally left office.”
It added that Johnson Akuamoa-Asiedu will continue to act as Auditor-General until the President appoints a substantive head.
However, President Akufo-Addo later in May last year reiterated that the former Auditor-General, Daniel Yao Domelevo was not hounded out of office.
According to him, Mr Domelevo’s removal was due to his attainment of the national retirement age of 60.
“There’s a time for retiring which is prescribed by statute, not my making. If you are 60 years old you’re supposed no longer to be able to work in the public service,” he said.
Latest Stories
-
Developing countries paid more in debt service in 2025 – World Bank
45 seconds -
Education Minister raises concern over prolonged CETAG strike
3 minutes -
Vice President honours Nkrumah’s photographer, Chris Hesse, for safeguarding national memory
11 minutes -
3 arrested for impersonating Speaker, IGP on social media
11 minutes -
BoG to tighten monetary policy in half-year 2026
19 minutes -
Parliament approves GH₵357 billion budget for 2026
25 minutes -
MAX and Bolt announce strategic partnership to power electric mobility and vehicle ownership in Ghana
41 minutes -
Greater Accra poultry farmers association says it was excluded from gov’t ‘Nkoko nkiti nkiti’ initiative
55 minutes -
Michael Adangba survives dawn road crash en route to Bolgatanga
59 minutes -
Court remands 40-year-old man for alleged murder
60 minutes -
AngloGold Ashanti Obuasi mine donates fire tender to boost emergency response in municipality
1 hour -
Gov’t introduces sliding-scale mining royalties to capture price gains
1 hour -
Global Africa Summit Accra 2025 rallies investors, diaspora and policymakers to boost trade and growth
1 hour -
New research suggests a better way to fight littering in Ghana
1 hour -
UN-backed experts say Gaza food supplies improving but 100,000 still in ‘catastrophic conditions’
2 hours
