Audio By Carbonatix
Corruption Watch Ghana has uncovered how several key state and private institutions, including the Ghana Police Service, parliament, the judiciary, and the Attorney-General’s Department, have been fined heavily for violating the Right to Information (RTI) law.
According to its latest investigative report, released on Monday, September 29, a total of about GH₵ 5.6 million in penalties has been imposed by the RTI Commission (RTIC) on more than 60 institutions for refusing or failing to provide information requested by citizens.
The findings show that the Ghana Police Service alone has already paid GH₵ 450,357 in fines, while the Commission on Human Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ) owes GH₵ 30,000.
Parliament has settled GH₵ 53,785, the Judicial Service has an outstanding GH₵ 100,000, the Attorney-General’s Department owes GHS 50,000, and the Social Security and National Insurance Trust (SSNIT) has paid GH₵ 200,000.
Outside the core governance agencies, the Agricultural Development Bank (ADB) topped the list with the heaviest single fine of GH₵ 1.365 million. Other significant penalties include GH₵ 260,000 paid by the Ministry of Education, GH₵ 150,000 by the Lands Commission, and GH₵ 60,000 by the Ghana Audit Service. The Public Procurement Authority (PPA) still owes GH₵ 100,000.
The report, titled “Saga over RTI: Millions paid as penalty”, reveals that taxpayers’ money is being used by public institutions to settle these fines. It further notes that the RTIC issued the penalties in more than 70 determinations against at least 60 separate organisations.
In terms of frequency, the Ministry of Education emerged with the highest number of penalties (four), followed by the Ghana Police Service with three. Ten other bodies, including the Ghana Education Service (GES), Judicial Service, Lands Commission, PPA, Ministry of Energy, and Department of Urban Roads, have each been fined twice.
Corruption Watch explained that many of the institutions fined are the very ones that should be promoting access to information.
“Some key governance institutions, which should promote access to information, are either refusing or failing to comply with the Right to Information (RTI) law by denying access to information requested by citizens,” the report said.
The six-month investigation, conducted between February and July 2025, was carried out by Corruption Watch Ghana, an initiative of the Ghana Center for Democratic Development (CDD-Ghana), in partnership with Transparency International Ghana, Ghana Anti-Corruption Coalition, the Africa Center for International Law and Accountability, and media partners Joy FM and Adom FM. The project is supported by the European Union.
Latest Stories
-
Mahama third-term talk ‘absurd fantasy’ – Kwakye Ofosu dismisses rumours
24 minutes -
Telecel Ghana spreads joy and cheer with 2Moorch Christmas campaign
34 minutes -
Newmont wins multiple honours at 2025 Ghana Mining Industry Awards
40 minutes -
Gov’t protests ‘inhumane treatment’ of Ghanaians at Israel’s Ben Gurion International Airport
49 minutes -
Why Europe’s far-right parties might not love Trump back
1 hour -
Labour Minister Pelpuo rejects ‘shortchanged worker’ claim after tariff hikes
1 hour -
One wrong move could distort the budget; labour, PURC must fix this – Pelpuo
2 hours -
Tariff hike vs Base pay: Labour Minister Pelpuo says look at the full picture
2 hours -
New tariff adjustment ignores macroeconomic reality, says ECG Economist
3 hours -
New water tariff only covers GWCL survival needs – PURC explains 15.92% approval decision
3 hours -
Tariff proposal: We rejected all long-term ECG projects – PURC discloses
3 hours -
Galamsey costs, low tariffs make 24/7 water supply unrealistic – GWCL PRO
4 hours -
We’ll try to keep taps running, but not 24/7 – GWCL on new 15.92% approved tariff
4 hours -
We’ll do our best to keep the lights on – ECG assures despite tariff shortfalls
5 hours -
Egypt’s FA wants World Cup ‘Pride Match’ plans cancelled
5 hours
