Audio By Carbonatix
The General Secretary of the Ghana Medical Association (GMA), Dr Richard Selormey, has criticised the Electricity Company of Ghana (ECG) for its stringent 72-hour ultimatum to 91 hospitals cautioning them to settle their outstanding bills or risk being disconnected.
According to him, the power distributing company's 3-day window is insufficient for the health facilities to come up with the combined outstanding amount of GH¢261 million owed to ECG.
He further questioned the logic behind targeting the healthcare sector, whose debt owed contributes only 4.5% to ECG's total debt.
“Why do you want to suck from the healthcare when bigger chunks are waiting?” the General Secretary quizzed.
“ECG needs to be realistic, the health facilities cannot pay the debt within the three-day ultimatum they have been given, and if they are actually going to disconnect, then they would have to disconnect all the facilities and we will all sit and watch what the government does,” he said on JoyNews’ PM Express.
ECG on Wednesday March 13, issued a notice to 91 hospitals in various parts of the country threatening to disconnect them from the national grid should they fail to settle their debt within 72 hours.
Among the notable hospitals facing potential disconnection are the Korle Bu Teaching Hospital, the 37 Military Hospital, Ridge Hospital in the Greater Accra region, Komfo Anokye and Manhyia Government Hospitals in the Ashanti region, Ho Teaching Hospital in the Volta region, and Kyebi Government Hospital in the Eastern region.
This move is part of ECG’s broader strategy to recover customer debts and strengthen its operational capacity.
Reacting to this, Dr Selormey warned that if ECG proceeds with disconnections at these health facilities, it would have significant repercussions for patient care.
Dr Selormey, therefore called on ECG to engage in further discussions with all stakeholders, urging the company to reconsider its ultimatum.
“The 72 hours, I think it is unreasonable and won’t be adhered to by anybody,” he said on Wednesday.
He stressed the need for transparency regarding the cost of healthcare, suggesting that if the government cannot fully cover these expenses, it should openly discuss cost-sharing measures with the public.
He further warned that any disconnections would be met with a unified response from the healthcare sector, and observers would closely monitor the consequences.
Latest Stories
-
How gold saved the cedi in 2025
6 minutes -
A celebration of homegrown talent: Lagos meets Accra with cross-border fashion pop-up
8 minutes -
Prudential Bank empowers merchant partners with POS training in Accra and Kumasi
19 minutes -
There’s a challenge in our party, and we need a bold leader to win power for us – Bryan Acheampong
21 minutes -
Asantehene is a national asset – Mahama commends Otumfuo’s role in Bawku peace process
44 minutes -
PruRide Accra champions health, youth empowerment and sustainability through cycling
46 minutes -
Ghana set for a dazzling Christmas 2025
49 minutes -
Dr. Bawumia is the overwhelming favourite in NPP primaries with 69.7% lead – new survey
53 minutes -
Jospong Group donates towards Zoomlion Central Mosque completion
1 hour -
NPP delegates rate Dr. Bawumia as the candidate with the strongest leadership qualities – survey
1 hour -
Nigeria beats Ghana, Liberia and China to win ABF 2025
1 hour -
Rolihlahla Africa Law Journal debuts with five inaugural papers
2 hours -
African Athletics Championships to slated for May 12, 2026 in Accra
2 hours -
GHAFFAP advocates government support to farmers in restoration of degraded forests
2 hours -
A dream deferred: The journey of a loading boy
2 hours
