Audio By Carbonatix
The Wa Central MP, Abdul-Rashid Hassan Pelpuo has described as "calculated" and "intentional" the attempts by the Audit Service Board to prevent Mr Daniel Yao Domelevo's from returning to his post as Auditor-General.
Speaking to JoyNews’ Kwesi Parker Wilson from the Floor of Parliament, the legislator stated that the hurdles placed before Mr Domelevo have been orchestrated by “the powers that be to frustrate him for fighting against corruption".
His statement comes in response to a three-page letter addressed to Mr. Domelevo from the Audit Service Board saying that the Auditor General was due for retirement on June 1, 2020 based on his date of birth.
Meanwhile, Mr Domelevo is expected to resume work on Wednesday, March 3, following a directive from the Presidency in July 2020 to take his accumulated leave of 167 days.
The legislator who indicated that he has been following the chronology of events said, “I think the Auditor General has been given a very raw deal.
"First of all, he was compelled to go on leave, his leave was then extended because he wanted to go the legal and Constitutional rule to ask questions about whether that leave could be relaxed for him
“The powers that be then made sure that they extended his leave. Now the leave is over and they are bringing more impediments on his way. This is a calculated intentional attempt to frustrate him and to fight back at somebody who is fighting corruption, they are fighting him back," he said.
According to him, "corruption is a very powerful instrument of war", and once Mr Domelovo has decided to fight it, he should be ready to face the repercussions.
“And that is what he is facing,” he added.
Consequently, he urged the Attorney General to report for duty tomorrow as scheduled, adding that the law court is the only entity mandated to determine the disparity in his date of birth and not the Audit Service Board.
He also questioned the grounds on which the Audit Service are making their claim.
“On what grounds are they saying that? They haven't traveled the length and they have nothing to stand on.
"Let him come to work, then they can raise the issues. Let the matter travel the length so we know that he has lost the case," he stressed.
Mr Rashid Pelpuo further stated that the step taken by the government of Ghana and the Board puts a stain on the image of Ghana as a country that claims commitment to fighting corruption.
"It is bad for Ghana, it is not just about the Auditor General, it is about people who are insisting that somebody who we all know Nation wide as someone committed to fighting corruption is being fought tooth and nail to the point that he can.t return to work," the legislator stated.
Latest Stories
-
31 granted bail over illegal mining in Apramprama forest reserve
24 minutes -
Son of Iran’s exiled late monarch urges supporters to replace embassy flags
31 minutes -
Gold Empire Resources applauds gov’t crackdown on illegal mining; calls for prosecution of financiers and sponsors
33 minutes -
Western North NPP raises alarm over cocoa sector neglect, cites lack of funds and jute sacks
49 minutes -
Government still owes IPPs over $700m in legacy debt — JoyNews Research
50 minutes -
Charge Ofori-Atta and stop the public commentary – Frank Davies tells AG
1 hour -
NPP race: Massive turnout in Gushegu as delegates endorse Bawumia
1 hour -
Ashaiman traders protest main market redevelopment, fear losing stalls and livelihoods
1 hour -
Daily Insight for CEOs: The CEO’s role in strengthening goal setting and OKRs (Objectives and Key Results) across the Organisation
1 hour -
Protect it, fix inefficiencies: BoG Governor on Gold-for-Reserves
1 hour -
Ghana to host 2026 Africa Aquatics Championships in May
2 hours -
IGP and Management Board tour police recruitment centres in Greater Accra to assess process
2 hours -
BoG pushes back on IMF claims, says FX reforms are fixing not creating problems
2 hours -
Stability came at a cost – BoG defends billions lost in Domestic Gold Purchase Programme
2 hours -
Ofori-Atta’s lawyer slams AG over public disclosure of ‘inconclusive’ offshore probe
2 hours
