Audio By Carbonatix
The Minority in Parliament has pushed back against recent remarks made by Professor Kwamena Ahwoi, former Minister for Local Government, describing aspects of his submission on Ghana’s decentralisation process as inaccurate and misleading.
Prof Ahwoi, a long-standing advocate for decentralisation, had argued at the National Dialogue on Decentralisation and Responsive Governance that the creation of new districts and regions in recent years amounted to an “overreach” and was counterproductive to effective local governance.
But in a strongly worded response, the Minority insisted that decentralisation must be understood as more than maintaining existing governance structures.
“Decentralisation is about bringing government closer to the people and ensuring equitable development across the country. The creation of new districts and regions was, and remains, a deliberate policy choice to extend the reach of government, empower local structures, and enable previously underserved areas to directly receive attention and resources,” the statement said.
New Regions Not an Overreach
Addressing Prof. Ahwoi’s claim that Ghana had “survived with ten regions for over five decades” and therefore did not need the six new regions created between 2018 and 2019, the Minority dismissed the argument as a misreading of policy intent.
“The question was never about mere survival. It was about facilitating growth, inclusion, and accelerated development,” the statement explained, adding that the new regions had already opened up opportunities for infrastructure, social services, and investment that were previously constrained.
On Population Requirements
The Minority also challenged Prof. Ahwoi’s suggestion that successive presidents had ignored population requirements in creating metropolitan, municipal, and district assemblies (MMDAs).
“Every MMDA that was created, at least under the NPP administration, satisfied the population thresholds and economic viability requirements enshrined in the Local Governance Act, 2016 (Act 936). The process was undertaken with due regard to the law, not partisan convenience,” the statement argued.
Tangible Benefits of New Regions
Highlighting the impact of the six newly created regions, the Minority pointed to what it described as “monumental developments” achieved in record time.
These, it said, included the establishment of fully functional Regional Coordinating Councils, departmental structures for education, health, agriculture and highways, as well as new regional offices for security agencies such as the Police, Immigration, Fire and Prisons Services.
"Over 60 significant developments of varying scale were completed under the Akufo-Addo administration. These projects are not theoretical; they are functional, operational, and in daily use by citizens,” the statement emphasised.
Concerns Over Dialogue Framing
The Minority further suggested that the platform on which Prof. Ahwoi made his comments was politically skewed.
“While the programme was couched in the language of ‘resetting decentralisation,’ the framing and theme appear politically motivated, designed to advance the agenda of the ruling party rather than provide a neutral platform for a balanced national dialogue,” the group noted.
Commitment to Decentralisation
Concluding, the Minority reaffirmed its commitment to Ghana’s decentralisation agenda as a dynamic process aimed at deepening governance, empowering communities, and expanding opportunities for development.
“The creation of new districts and regions is not an overreach; it is an investment in inclusion and nation-building,” the statement signed by Hon. Francis Asenso-Boakye, Ranking Member on the Parliamentary Committee on Local Government and Decentralisation, said.
Latest Stories
-
TCDA CEO leads charge to scale up cashew apple value addition opportunities
4 minutes -
MGL’s May Day Egg market ends in resounding success as crowds turn out for affordable eggs
43 minutes -
Energy expert advocates increased private-sector role in power distribution to tackle dumsor
48 minutes -
Tony Asare Writes: A clotted artery, by-passes and detours
52 minutes -
No road project cancelled under Mahama’s reset agenda — Roads Minister
58 minutes -
Mahama praises IGP Yohunu, hails intelligence-led policing at Krobo-Odumase commissioning
59 minutes -
“Energy situation is stable” – John Jinapor assures Ghanaians
1 hour -
Ghana Tuna Association reaffirms sustainability commitment on World Tuna Day
1 hour -
Mahama commissions Odumase Krobo Divisional Police HQ, boosts operations with vehicles
2 hours -
Roads Minister urges contractors to stay on site, assures prioritised payments
2 hours -
Suhuyini credits Ameri plant for averting 2024 power crisis in Kumasi
2 hours -
Thirteen killed in Israeli strikes on southern Lebanon, health ministry says
2 hours -
Tano North MP sounds alarm over galamsey devastation, accuses officials of shielding perpetrators
2 hours -
Digital wealth, analog poverty: Why technology isn’t closing the gap
2 hours -
World Relays: Ghana miss automatic qualification after finishing 4th in heat
2 hours