Audio By Carbonatix
As part of activities to mark this year's African Union Anti-Corruption Day (AUACD), the Ghana Anti-Corruption Coalition (GACC) is intensifying its campaign to empower young people across the country to lead the charge against corruption.
AUACD, celebrated annually on July 11, since the adoption of the African Union Convention on Preventing and Combating Corruption (AUCPCC) in 2003, reinforces the continent’s commitment to transparency, justice, and collective action.
This year’s commemoration focuses on the AU’s theme: “Justice for Africans and People of African Descent Through Reparations.”
Since 2018, GACC has collaborated with key stakeholders to mark the day through citizen engagement, outreach, and education, with a special focus on young people.
For 2025, the Coalition is expanding its reach to 40 districts across all 16 regions. With support from the Hewlett Foundation, GACC is using both physical and digital platforms, including schools, churches, mosques, community centres, and media, to encourage civic participation, foster integrity, and promote whistleblowing.
“Young people are often disproportionately affected by corruption. It limits their access to quality education, job opportunities, and public services, while eroding trust in systems meant to serve them. Yet, they also represent one of the most powerful forces for positive change,” according to GACC.
GACC aims to nurture a new generation of accountable leaders by urging Ghanaian youth to commit to a 3Rs: "Resist, Reject, and Report" corruption.
The Coalition is calling on families, schools, faith groups, civil society, and the media to stand in solidarity with young people as they champion transparency and justice.
Among last year's activities, GACC’s Local Accountability Networks (LANets) equipped 27,667 young people, many of them first-time voters, with tools to identify and resist election-related corruption.
The outreach spanned 33 districts in 14 regions, reaching students in 40 senior high schools, 24 junior high schools, and three vocational institutions. These interactive sessions, according to GACC, provided safe spaces for young people to learn, discuss, and take action.
Latest Stories
-
Keeping Ofori-Atta for 8 years was Akufo-Addo’s worst decision – Winston Amoah
4 minutes -
Whose security? whose interest?: U.S. military action, Nigeria’s internal failure, and the dynamics of ECOWAS in West Africa
14 minutes -
Abuakwa South MP names baby of 13-year-old teenage mother after First Lady
24 minutes -
Police thwart robbery attempt at Afienya-Mataheko, 4 suspects dead
44 minutes -
Don’t lower the bar because things were worse before – Kojo Yankson on Mahama gov’t
1 hour -
Jefferson Sackey rallies support for Dr. Bawumia
1 hour -
2024 elections helped stabilise Ghana’s democracy – Sulemana Braimah
2 hours -
Livestream: 2025 Year in Review
2 hours -
Ghana’s crypto transactions hit $10bn by November – SEC
2 hours -
SEC says VASP law will protect investors, ensure market integrity
2 hours -
Mandatory Smart Port note will increase cost of doing business – Coalition of exporters, importers and traders
2 hours -
Banda MP hands over police station, quarters to Banda Boase community
3 hours -
I’m going to spend a lot more energy to make Kumasi clean – KMA boss
3 hours -
We’re on a journey together to restore our party to its rightful place – Dr. Bawumia to NPP delegates
3 hours -
Thieves use drill to steal €30m in German bank heist
3 hours
