Audio By Carbonatix
The Minister of State at the Ministry of Finance, Charles Adu-Boahen, has refuted claims that he has tendered his resignation to the President.
In a short reply to such claims he said “No sir! Never. You can quote me. I have not tendered my resignation.”
His response comes amidst calls for his removal or resignation from office as a result of the economic downturn.
On Tuesday, October 25, 80 out of the 137 majority MPs had joined calls for the sacking of the Minister of Finance, Ken Ofori-Atta, and the Minister of State at the Finance Ministry, Charles Adu-Boahen citing their poor management of the country’s fiscal space.
They had also blamed the duo for the delay in the ongoing International Monetary Fund programme negotiations that is expected to give the country a bailout.
The lawmakers added, “We are by this medium communicating our strong desire that the President changes the Minister of Finance and the Minister of State at the Finance Ministry without further delay to restore hope to the financial sector and reverse the downward trend in the growth of the economy.”
The group led by the MP for Asante Akim North, Andy Appiah-Kubi said the failure of government to heed to their demands will result in them boycotting all government business.
“Meanwhile we want to serve notice, and notice is hereby served that until such persons as aforementioned are made to resign or removed from office, we members of the majority caucus here in Parliament will not participate in any business of government by or for the President by any other minister.
“We hope that those of us [at] the backbench and members of the majority caucus will abide by this prayer. We are saying that if our request is not responded to positively, we will not be present for the budget hearing, neither will we participate in the debate”.
Their move was applauded by the general public and civil society who had also been calling for the resignation of the Finance Minister.
However, in a U-turn, the MPs later acceded to President Akufo-Addo’s appeal to let Ken Ofori-Atta and Charles Adu-Boahen stay in office till after the IMF deal is sorted out.
In a statement released by the Majority Leader, Osei Kyei-Mensah-Bonsu, he said, the Minister of Finance and the Minister of State at the Finance Ministry will stay “until the conclusion of the round of negotiations with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the presentation of the Budget Statement and Economic Policy in November, 2022 and the subsequent passage of the Appropriation Bill after which time the demand will be acted upon.”
Latest Stories
-
Political row erupts in India over ex-army chief’s unpublished memoir
12 minutes -
US must be prudent when supplying arms to Taiwan, Xi tells Trump
22 minutes -
Washington Post announces sweeping layoffs, scaling back news coverage
33 minutes -
Growing calls in India to restrict children’s social media use
43 minutes -
Gunmen reportedly kill dozens in Nigeria as US military deployment confirmed
55 minutes -
‘Painful times in my marriage’ – Melinda French Gates reacts to ex-husband in Epstein files
1 hour -
Son of Norway’s crown princess holds back tears giving evidence at rape trial
1 hour -
‘Compare yourself with your peers, not Fela’ – Yeni Kuti tells artistes
1 hour -
Robbie Williams: British people are good at devaluing ourselves
2 hours -
Takoradi Circuit Court remands 13 suspected illegal miners into prison custody
4 hours -
Firewood seller jailed for stealing rubber lumps
4 hours -
Three drivers granted bail over alleged iPhone robbery
4 hours -
Murdered immigration officer’s case adjourned to February 25
4 hours -
Two KIA staff granted bail for theft of 160 litres of diesel
4 hours -
Court convicts lotto writer over cannabis possession
4 hours
