Audio By Carbonatix
The Ghana Prisons Council, under the leadership of Chair Apostle Alexander Kumi Larbi, paid a courtesy visit to the Minister for the Interior, Muntaka Mohammed-Mubarak, to deliberate on critical issues affecting the Ghana Prisons Service and explore avenues for strengthened collaboration.
The meeting was held at the Ministry of the Interior.
According to a post shared on Facebook by the Ministry, during the engagement, discussions centred on forging partnerships to support the effective execution of the Council’s mandate.

In his remarks, Apostle Kumi Larbi reaffirmed the Council’s commitment to supporting the Service, emphasising the importance of ongoing consultations with the Director-General and her team.

He also highlighted the need for evidence-based overviews of the Service’s operations to inform strategic planning.

The Council Chair expressed appreciation for Government’s provision of vehicles to the Service, including pickups, buses, and a command vehicle handed over to the Director-General last year.
While commending these deliveries, he appealed for additional vehicles to mitigate persistent operational challenges, particularly transportation constraints resulting from infrastructural limitations and the demanding nature of the Service’s mandate.

Responding to the Council’s presentation, Muntaka Mohammed-Mubarak thanked the team for the visit and for sharing their vision and initiatives. He acknowledged that the concerns raised remain a priority for the Ministry and noted that notable progress has been made in addressing them.

The Minister underscored that the prisons remain a pivotal focus area for Government. He assured the Council that all matters presented are under active consideration, highlighting President John Dramani Mahama's ongoing efforts to resolve accommodation challenges across all security services.

Mr Muntaka further stressed the importance of prioritising salary harmonisation to enhance workforce motivation.
Additionally, the Minister reiterated Government’s commitment to fortifying prison facilities and expressed support for collaboration with private organisations through Public-Private Partnerships (PPP) as a sustainable strategy.

He also pointed to progress on relevant legislative initiatives, including the Parole and Community Service Bill, which is expected to strengthen the broader criminal justice framework.
Latest Stories
-
KGL’s “big payments” are the price of state-backed monopoly, not heroism
1 hour -
Success is built on discipline, not talent – Ace Ankomah on becoming Mfantsipim’s Best Student, from weakest class
2 hours -
The Ga question we prefer not to ask
3 hours -
Korle Klottey’s revenue surges to GH¢40 million as municipality positions itself as an investment hub
3 hours -
EPAC calls for greater investment in packaging to boost local brands
3 hours -
Unpacking the Future of AI: The Promise of Embodied Intelligence
3 hours -
The Inconvenient Truth: Institutions rarely collapse because of bad laws. They collapse when their guardians stop guarding
4 hours -
World Cup expected to be the biggest betting event in history
5 hours -
Trump says he ‘loves the inflation’ as US prices rise at fastest rate in three years
5 hours -
Iran says it struck ships in Strait of Hormuz after US launches new strikes
5 hours -
Growing backlash in Japan over Trump’s use of anime characters
5 hours -
Bill Gates says Epstein wanted personal relationship, but he ‘never reciprocated’
5 hours -
Daniel Doe Djirackor
6 hours -
Evangelist Mrs Grace Baaba Fabiwa Duah
6 hours -
Missing newborn at Salaga Hospital: Police question staff as regional team launches probe
6 hours