Audio By Carbonatix
Health Minister-designate Kwaku Agyeman-Manu on Wednesday admitted the delay in payment of allowances to frontline health workers.
He gave an assurance that they would be paid by close of this week.
Attributing delay to inconsistent data, the Minister-designate said he had tasked health facility managers to review the list of such persons who risked their lives to save lives in the heat of the pandemic.
Mr Agyeman-Manu, MP for Dormaa, and immediate past Minister of Health kept his portfolio through the first term of the Akufo-Addo government, as nominated by President Akufo-Addo to return to the same portfolio in the second term.
He is being vetted for the position, as a requirement of the 1992 Ghanaian Constitution, currently being utilized as the primary Law in Ghana’ governance system.

The Appointment Committee, chaired currently by Joseph Osei-Owusu, First Deputy Speaker, recommends to Parliament for approval or persons nominated by President for appointment as Minister of State, Deputy Minister, Members of Council of State, the Chief Justice and other Justices of the Supreme Court and any other persons specified under the constitution or under any other enactment.
On his appearance, the Minister Designate, a management accountant, who said he would be 71 this year, answered questions on his performance during the first term of the Akufo-Addo led Government, and insisted that he was fit for the job.
The questions touched on the management of the Covid-19, his previous achievements at the Health Ministry and announced what measures he would put in place to advance health care delivery.
He identified hygiene and sanitation s major challenges of health delivery in Ghana.
According to the nominee, some $100 million allocated for the fight against COVID-19 has been exhausted, but however, disclosed that some $120 million loan facility from the World Bank, which about maturing would be used by the Ministry to enhance the nation’s fight against the disease.
As at February 10, 2021, the Ghana Health Service reports that there were 73,003 confirmed cases of the disease in Ghana, with 482 deaths and 65, 583 recoveries.
In a recent screening exercise done by the Noguchi Memorial Institute for Medical Research, it came out that 17 of the 275 MPS and 151 parliamentary staff have contracted the disease, which made Speaker, Alban Bagbin declare a three week shutdown of the House since Tuesday, February 9, 2021, with only the Appointments Committee and ancillary staff continuing to work.
Latest Stories
-
I will give marriage a second chance – Juliet IbrahimÂ
3 hours -
King Charles reflects on ‘pressures of conflict’ in Commonwealth message
4 hours -
Rapper-politician Balendra Shah unseats Nepal’s ex-PM as he heads for victory
4 hours -
Mayor Sadiq Khan invites embattled AI firm Anthropic to expand in London
4 hours -
T-bills auction: Investor interest remains high; interest rates fall to 4.8%
5 hours -
Iran names Khamenei’s hardline son Mojtaba as new supreme leader
5 hours -
US-Iran conflict: Supply chain impacts will be felt globally
5 hours -
Interest rates declined by 23% since January 2025, but market pressures likely to resurface – Report
5 hours -
Explosion at US embassy in Oslo may have been terrorism, Norway police say
5 hours -
Zoomlion MD Doris Adjei honoured with Ghana Women of Excellence Gold Award for Environmental Sustainability
6 hours -
President Mahama bans foreign travel for boards of SOEs and public institutions over rising costs
6 hours -
Withdraw Ghanaian peacekeepers from Lebanon now – LACPSA-Ghana
6 hours -
Give to Gain: strengthening African media through women’s leadership
6 hours -
Chief of Staff urges genuine interpersonal relationships for national unity
7 hours -
Ghana High Commission in London opens Export Trade House
7 hours
