Audio By Carbonatix
Former GIMPA Rector, Professor Stephen Adei, has stressed the need for enhanced transparency in the scholarship allocation process.
His call follows a report by The Fourth Estate uncovering instances where scholarships designated for financially disadvantaged students were awarded to successful politicians and their relatives.
Notably, the daughters of the National Chairman of the New Patriotic Party (NPP) and a former Inspector General of Police were listed among the beneficiaries.
In an interview with Joy News on Wednesday, April 4, Professor Adei stressed the importance of making all scholarship applications and recipients public.
He urged the media to play a pivotal role in holding the government accountable to this transparency standard.
“It has to do with making the system transparent; those who apply and those who are awarded must be published, and this is the type of information that I expect the media to be insisting upon because of the information bill. I think that it must be made public so we can name and shame. So long as we do not do that, I do not think it is a legal issue, but there must be transparency and publishing.
"All those who get the scholarship should be published and the media people can help greatly by insisting that, that is done than what we see as people are alleging. Blay and other people; other ministers… having their children there, then the Ghanaian public would react,” he said.
On another note, Professor Adei highlighted that while it may not be illegal for children of affluent and influential individuals to obtain scholarships earmarked for the financially disadvantaged, it is undeniably unethical.
He conceded that there might be limited legal recourse in such cases but stressed the significance of acknowledging the moral implications of such actions.
Professor Adei insisted on the importance of continued vigilance from both the media and the public in holding the government accountable, underscoring that this issue is fundamentally about social justice.
“For example, you won't believe that my son went to KNUST, and my friend was the vice-chancellor. I was then rector of GIMPA, but I said I would like to pay for it, and I paid for my son, and he was even entitled to a government scholarship. So, it is a moral issue.
"I am wondering whether, on a moral issue, you can punish or take the people to court. I think that when the list is published, there are some who, if they knew the list was published, would not go for it in the future.”
Latest Stories
-
EximBank marks 10 years with renewed drive for export finance and industrial transformation
19 seconds -
The Inconvenient Truth: The Cost of Confusing Citizenship, Government, Governance, and Governing
3 minutes -
David Asante says Ghana Publishing Company was profitable before change in management
6 minutes -
Government urged to curb sand winning on farmlands
9 minutes -
DVLA to issue international driving licences to Ghanaians in five countries
11 minutes -
Women Development Bank to be rolled out this year – Kwakye Ofosu announces
14 minutes -
Akonta Mining manager granted GH¢10m bail in Wontumi illegal mining case
17 minutes -
ICU-Ghana kicks against sale of VALCO
26 minutes -
UK secures record supply of offshore wind projects
27 minutes -
Africa faces disproportionate impact from expanded U.S. travel ban and immigration policies
28 minutes -
Ken Ofori-Atta remains in U.S. federal custody ahead of January 20 court hearing
37 minutes -
NRSA issues safety advisory on Toyota Voxy vehicles
39 minutes -
Uganda election chief says he has had threats over results declaration
41 minutes -
Government to reorient security agencies on media relations – Kwakye Ofosu
42 minutes -
Late MP’s body detained as Bole chief, others demand nearly GH¢1m from family in protracted land dispute
43 minutes
