
Audio By Carbonatix
Interior Minister Alhaji Muntaka Mohammed-Mubarak has served notice to hold former Gaming Commission boss, Peter Mireku, accountable for an alleged GH¢414,590.53 financial loss.
This was caused by an alleged bond breach involving a former staff member named Moses Teye Mensah.
According to the Minister, Mr Mireku allegedly failed to follow due process in approving Mr Mensah's study leave with pay, leading to the significant financial loss.
"The Commissioner was Peter Mireku, and on this particular instance, he did not follow the laid-down procedure for granting someone study leave with pay," the Minister stated on Tuesday.
Appearing before the Public Accounts Committee of Parliament, the Interior Minister said: "Honourable Chair, because of this, I'm going to insist that he is invited to pay the money."
The Minister outlined three key actions to address the situation: Peter Mireku would be made to pay the money and would be held personally accountable for the financial loss.
"The bond guarantor will pay part. The person who guaranteed the bond, still working at the Gaming Commission, will also be required to pay part of the amount.
"And Moses Teye Mensah will be placed on a stop list. He will be arrested at the airport and made to pay the money if he returns to Ghana," he said.
Acting Gaming Commissioner, Emmanuel Siisi Quainoo, revealed that the Commission had made multiple efforts to recover the money from Mr Mensah, but to no avail.
"Honourable Chair, I have written several times to Moses Teye Mensah. He responds, claiming he is pursuing another master’s degree, but has not provided any school details or transcripts. He keeps tossing the Gaming Commission," he told the Committee.
According to Mr Quainoo, the amount in question, GH¢414,590.53, is significant, equivalent to nearly half the Commission's monthly salary bill.
He noted that he had written to the Attorney-General and the Inspector General of Police, escalating the issue directly to the Interior Minister for further intervention.
Latest Stories
-
Healthy people are Ghana’s strongest currency, Finance Ministry says
1 minute -
MTN recognised among global telecom leaders in Ranking Digital Rights Index, ranks second worldwide
12 minutes -
Declining donor funding makes CHAG partnership more critical – Finance Ministry
23 minutes -
CHAG delivers up to 40% of Ghana’s healthcare with just 7% of facilities – Executive Director
31 minutes -
Oil prices are falling, but Ghana’s economic risks are far from over – BoG Governor
41 minutes -
Groupe Nduom eyes Standard Chartered retail business, calls for local ownership
48 minutes -
Deposits safe, banking services uninterrupted – Standard Chartered reassures customers
1 hour -
Gov’t to recruit 550 Arabic teachers to tackle staffing gap in Islamic schools
1 hour -
Gov’t prepares to evacuate nearly 900 nationals from South Africa ahead of anti-immigration protests
1 hour -
Sales assistant fined GH¢12,000 after stealing GH¢353,471 from employer in marriage scam
1 hour -
GCAA probes alleged mistreatment of KLM passengers after Amsterdam delay
2 hours -
NRSA Director-General outlines reforms to reduce road carnage
2 hours -
Kumasi tomato traders push for revival of local tomato industry
2 hours -
Peace Council establishes peace committee, monitors to strengthen peace efforts
2 hours -
My agenda is to reunite, restructure, restrengthen NPP – Paul Afoko
2 hours