Audio By Carbonatix
Member of Parliament for North Tongu, Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, has expressed shock at how government has so far expended the funds allocated towards the controversial national cathedral project.
The MP, who has been on a crusade to expose everything that is wrong with the project, has in his latest Facebook post revealed that, only US$22.07 million of public funds went to the contractors, RIBADE JV, for actual construction out of over $58 million dollars allocated to the project.
Already, government has been criticized for spending huge sums of the allocated funds towards the cathedral on consultancy services and other things.
“Ghanaians will be shocked to discover this morning that out of the US$58.14million of public funds unconstitutionally withdrawn without parliamentary approval for Akufo-Addo’s cathedral project, only a fraction of US$22.07 million went to the contractors, RIBADE JV for actual construction,” he said.
This, according to him, was brought to the bare when the contractors furnished parliament with details of how the US$ 58.14 million fund was spent on the project.
Mr Ablakwa said the document submitted provided a “comprehensive analysis of how they [RIBADE JV] utilized the US$22.07 million received between January 2021 and February 2022 when they had to suspend work for “lack of funds” even though far more money had been released from government coffers, albeit on the blindside of Parliament.”
He added that “This really means that out of the US$ 58.14 million of taxpayer funds wrongfully released for Akufo-Addo’s cathedral, more than US$ 36 million was expended on other items other than their core function of construction.
“We now know that only a paltry 37.9% of total public funds released was handed over to the contractors.”
The legislator, however, noted that concerns have been raised about how RIBADE JV utilised the US$ 22.07 million.
As a result, he questioned whether the $100 million demanded by the government to import steel for the project will be used appropriately.
“In any case, per their own sordid track record, there is no guarantee that if they are ever given US$ 100 million, all that money will be used for its advertised purpose.”
The National Cathedral Secretariat has constantly insisted that there hasn't been any wrongdoing or any acts of corruption in the execution of the project.
It recently engaged renowned auditing firm, Deloitte, to audit its books for the purposes of transparency and accountability.
Latest Stories
-
Barcelona Summit: Veep advances talks on agro-deal with GB Foods
20 minutes -
Eni, Partners sign deal to boost healthcare access in Western Region
47 minutes -
AfCFTA in Limbo?
1 hour -
UK and France to lead defensive mission in Strait of Hormuz
1 hour -
CHASS threatens to shut down schools as feeding negotiations end in deadlock
2 hours -
Ghana Stock Exchange ends week up as market cap surpasses GH¢266billion
2 hours -
Litina Travels launches “made in Ghana business expo” ahead of 2026 World Cup
3 hours -
Sudan IV scandal: Seven arrested as joint task force uncovers toxic palm oil trade in Koforidua
3 hours -
157 sites disrupted – MTN CEO reveals massive scale of fibre cable sabotage
3 hours -
Nestle Ghana launches 2026 Milo U-13 Champions League.
4 hours -
Thursdays for the Black Stars: Gov’t institutionalises weekly updates on $30m World Cup fund
4 hours -
Saturday showdown: OSP powers and new health policy to dominate Prime Insight
5 hours -
Enimil Ashon: A Ghanaian would’ve taken NDC/NPP flag to space
6 hours -
‘Help enlist me into police service’ – Suspect in alleged armoured vehicle theft pleads in court
6 hours -
Carrick leaves door open for Rashford return
6 hours