Audio By Carbonatix
President John Mahama has announced the establishment of a board of inquiry to investigate alleged irregularities in recent Ghana Armed Forces recruitment exercises.
This forms part of the steps in fulfilling his administration's pledge to reform security sector recruitment processes.
Speaking at the Jubilee House during his 120-day progress update on the Social Contract with Ghanaians, the President revealed comprehensive measures to eliminate militia influence and politicisation in security agencies.
"We promised to commence investigative processes into security agencies to pay state security agencies of militia and vigilante elements and enhance professionalism," Mahama stated, underscoring his government's commitment to institutional reform.
The newly constituted board of inquiry has been tasked with examining recent military recruitment exercises, with President Mahama emphasizing its mandate to "investigate recent recruitment processes aiming to uncover discrepancies and implement corrective measures."
This move follows persistent allegations of political interference and unfair practices in security sector enlistment under previous administrations.
As part of sweeping reforms, the government is implementing a multi-layered vetting system.
"Robust background checks are ongoing for all recruits and serving personnel," the President announced, adding that a new biometric database is being introduced to cross-reference personnel against national criminal and security intelligence records.
This system, President Mahama explained, will serve as a safeguard by "automatically disqualifying applicants linked to political vigilante networks," with the ultimate goal to "decentralize and depoliticize recruitments."
The administration is complementing these structural changes with ideological retraining programs. "Mandatory ideological reorientation sessions are planned to reinforce military neutrality, national unity and loyalty to the state and the Constitution," Mr Mahama added.
These reforms extend beyond the military, with the President noting that "similar processes are underway across other security agencies, including the police, fire service and prison services."
Latest Stories
-
EOCO exceeds GH¢200m target, recovers record GH¢337.4m in 2025 – Dominic Ayine
8 minutes -
‘Nite with the Stars’ to shake Kumasi with electrifying music performances on Christmas Day
11 minutes -
KsTU constitutes panel to review GTEC directive, VC qualification petition
20 minutes -
Ghana recovers over $15m from international crypto fraud syndicate – Attorney General
36 minutes -
Ghana to receive 300 new ISUZU buses to boost public transport, deputy transport minister confirms
37 minutes -
AG formally requests extradition of Ofori-Atta, Ernest Akore to face charges
55 minutes -
Ofori-Atta’s return to face justice now in US hands, says Ayine
56 minutes -
Asenso-Boakye backs Accra–Kumasi Expressway but urges caution on the process
58 minutes -
EU leaders face crunch decision on loaning Russia’s frozen cash to Ukraine
1 hour -
JoyBusiness Review 2025: GoldBod a ‘game changer’ for Ghana’s economy – Dalex Finance CEO
1 hour -
JoyBusiness Review 2025: Praise for GoldBod is premature without answers on illegal gold – Tax Consultant
1 hour -
UniMAC, AKUNA sign MoU to deliver hands on industry training for students
1 hour -
‘The Gods Are Not To Blame’ returns in tribute to theatre legend Mawuli Semevo
2 hours -
Ghana’s economy must transition from stability to growth in 2026 – Joe Jackson
2 hours -
Photos: Interior Minister opens Upper West Regional Police Headquarters
2 hours
