
Audio By Carbonatix
Ghanaians have expressed confidence that Mahama’s victory at the 2024 polls presents an opportunity to improve land management and administration in the country.
Ghanaians strongly believe that John Mahama’s return to power is an opportunity to restore and instil discipline in the land market and to improve the utilization of the nation’s natural resources compared to the outgoing government.
Reinforcing this popular belief among Ghanaians in his New Year message, John Mahama indicated his commitment to restoring integrity and efficiency in governance. He indicated to Ghanaians his intention to reset the economy for growth and job creation, which he said would be anchored on the implementation of his 24-hour economy policy - a cornerstone of his leadership.
He added that "…together, we will create an environment that fosters entrepreneurship, innovation, and sustainable development, ensuring that our youth can achieve their dreams right here at home."
Before Mahama’s New Year message, a legal luminary and statesman - Kwaku Ansah Asare and the MP for Sagnarigu - A. B. A. Fuseini expressed their confidence in Mahama’s ability to reset land management and administration in Ghana and to restore confidence in the way state lands are managed and allocated.
Both statesmen urged the incoming government to review and overhaul the regime governing state land management and to halt the state capture and abuse in the allocation of government lands to political appointees.
They urged the incoming government to address the many challenges facing the land sector and where possible return lands to their original owners - particularly those lands the state did not have a use for.
The statesmen were optimistic that land administration would see improvements for the collective good of all, particularly for traditional authorities, stools and families.
Currently, the land market is characterized by general indiscipline, difficult access to land, multiple sales, frequent litigation, a weak land administration regime, and inadequate security of tenure and conflicts of interests between and within stools, skins, families and clans.
The planned introduction of a Citizens Service Delivery Charter by the in-coming government would help address some of these challenges by streamlining service delivery by public officers and holding public officers accountable.
It would also ensure strict enforcement of the code of conduct for public servants.
In addition, the current state land allocation regime would be revised and replaced with a framework that restores trust, confidence and transparency while eliminating abuse of power by political appointees.
Latest Stories
-
Gramps Morgan names Ghanaian business leader Monalisa Effah as Ghana-Jamaica Homecoming Ambassador
19 minutes -
CAF President urges faith in African football despite AFCON 2025 issues
38 minutes -
AFCON U-17: Black Starlets’ aim is to win trophy – Head Coach Prosper Ogum
42 minutes -
ENFA expands access to global capital for Ghanaian SMEs
50 minutes -
Beyond security: Why mobile payment fraud has become a customer experience crisis
51 minutes -
Former Effia MP demands full disclosure of Truedare AI deal, warns of ‘hidden risks’
1 hour -
Joseph Cudjoe raises alarm over potential revenue loss in Truedare AI Customs deal
1 hour -
Video: Awoshie-Anyaa Highway: Years of fatal crashes caused by faulty traffic lights
1 hour -
No financial transactions with Ghana Card yet, says NIA
1 hour -
Former Netherlands Fire Chief engages GNFS Tema Command on capacity building
1 hour -
Finance Ministry defends Publican AI rollout amid stakeholder concerns
1 hour -
Police arrest 5 in Asankrangwa robbery; cash and guns retrieved
2 hours -
Why I joined NPP – Jeneral Ntatia
2 hours -
Three UDS students remanded over alleged armed robbery
2 hours -
Kudus Mohammed at risk of missing World Cup 2026 after fresh injury blow
2 hours