
Audio By Carbonatix
President John Dramani Mahama has announced plans to convene a high-level meeting on Thursday, October 9, with the Chief Justice, the Attorney General, and other key justice sector stakeholders to formulate a clear strategy for addressing the persistent mismanagement of public funds.
Speaking at the 12th Annual Conference of Chairpersons of Governing Boards and Councils, Chief Directors, and Chief Executives of the Public Services Commission of Ghana in Ho, Mr Mahama expressed deep concern over the recurring financial infractions exposed by the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) and the lack of accountability that follows.
“Recently, I've been watching the Public Accounts Committee, and it's so pathetic,” he lamented. “Why must we, every year, congregate at PAC and hear all kinds of atrocious things — recklessness with public funds and resources?”
The President stressed the need for a more decisive approach to deter public officials who misuse state funds, calling for what he described as a “fast-track process to Nsawam”, a reference to the country’s main correctional facility.
“Until we do that, until there's a deterrent, we’ll continue to come every year and talk about total misappropriation and infractions,” he said, referencing an estimated GH¢15 billion in losses revealed in recent audit reports. “Can you imagine what 15 billion cedis could do for this country?”
Mr Mahama also criticised the failure to enforce constitutional provisions that require Parliament to implement the Auditor-General’s findings, noting that the process remains unclear and largely ineffective.
“There’s a provision that says after the Public Accounts Committee has sat on the Auditor-General's report, Parliament must set up a committee to implement the findings. But we don’t even know if it should be a parliamentary committee or a separate one,” he observed.
He further condemned the ineffectiveness of Audit Report Implementation Committees (ARICs) within government departments, pointing out that most fail to act on PAC’s recommendations.
“Virtually nobody follows up on what recommendations were given. The ARICs are not working,” he said.
President Mahama emphasised the urgency of establishing a credible accountability system that ensures real consequences for public officials who mismanage or misuse public resources.
“We must find a way to create a deterrent until people know that they can be held responsible for their actions. If not, they’ll continue to do the same things,” he warned.
He assured that the outcome of Thursday’s meeting would lead to tangible reforms, including clear legal mechanisms to hold offenders accountable and end the culture of impunity in public office.
Latest Stories
-
Parliament approves new law to combat piracy, maritime crime
7 minutes -
Property sector vulnerable to money laundering despite economic gains – REAC
15 minutes -
ECG restores payment systems and vending platforms after flood disruption
23 minutes -
Real estate professionals urged to act as gatekeepers against illicit financial flows
32 minutes -
Labour issues 30-day ultimatum on Nkwanta violence
35 minutes -
U.S. Embassy in Ghana announces online auction of vehicles, government property
1 hour -
Cybercrime crackdown: CSA, police arrest high-interest Nigerian fraud suspect
1 hour -
Canada’s Tax Maze: Who’s helping Canadians navigate one of the world’s most complex tax systems?
2 hours -
Students kidnapped as militants storm school in Nigeria’s Borno state
2 hours -
Flood disaster is a national tragedy, not partisan issue – Bawumia
2 hours -
Access was just the beginning. Making banking matter is the real challenge
2 hours -
Asenso-Boakye urges gov’t to account for stalled $350 million flood control projects
2 hours -
US Supreme Court upholds birthright citizenship
2 hours -
Africa risks missing AI revolution unless universities rethink education
2 hours -
Dissolve Stan Dogbe flood task force now! — Afenyo-Markin tells government
2 hours