Audio By Carbonatix
Leadership of the Colleges of Education Teachers Association of Ghana (CETAG) has called on members to withdraw all services following the decision by government to freeze their July salary.
These services, according to a statement sighted by JoyNews, include attendance of meetings and congregation ceremonies, provision of academic counselling as well as supervision of students in their halls of residence.
CETAG explained that the decision is in response to the Minister of Education's directive to Principals and the Controller and Accountant General not to validate the July 2024 salaries of teaching staff of the 46 public colleges of education due to their ongoing strike.
"Leadership has referred the illegal directive to freeze our July salaries to our lawyers to take the necessary action on it immediately," the statement dated July 23 added.

Meanwhile, the National Labour Commission (NLC) has backed the decision by Ghana Tertiary Education Commission (GTEC) to freeze the salaries of the teachers.
Speaking on JoyNews, Executive Secretary of the Commission, Ofosu Asamoah insisted that the ongoing strike is illegal.
"This is like two elephants fighting and I feel so sad about it. The court has injuncted the strike, yet they are continuing with the strike. With that, it makes the strike illegal because the court says 'this strike is not right, so stop'.
"When it becomes an illegal strike, the law provides that they should not be paid for the period they engaged in the illegal strike," he explained.
Currently, the strike has affected all 46 public colleges of education nationwide.
According to the leadership of CETAG, the strike is to demand better working conditions and remuneration packages.
CETAG's demands include the payment of one month’s salary to each member for additional duties performed in 2022, and the application of agreed rates of allowances payable to public universities to deserving CETAG members.
- Read also: NLC injuncts CETAG strike
Due to this strike, the academic calendar has been interrupted and students are waiting anxiously for the resumption of classes.
Latest Stories
-
GPL 2025/26: Medeama score late to draw with Basake Holy StarsÂ
13 minutes -
Rapperholic Creators challenge blends digital talent and financial discipline for Ghanaian youth
22 minutes -
Justice on a leash – Minority claims law enforcement is being used to punish political opponents
25 minutes -
Dr Gideon Boako provides ¢10k seed capital for TanoFest Programme
32 minutes -
Bond market: Turnover rose by 64.39% to GH¢6.75bn
48 minutes -
Dutylex promises more in 2026; targets market expansion
55 minutes -
Government grants permits for Responsible Cooperative Mining in Anwia, Teleku Bokazo
56 minutes -
Bawumia still NPP’s strongest asset — Northern region operations team
57 minutes -
Christian Service University inaugurates Most Rev. Prof. Emmanuel Asante as first chancellor
1 hour -
Kumasi gridlock forces commuters to walk miles ahead of Christmas rush
1 hour -
Paramount Chief of Assin Fosu honours John Boadu at grand durbar
1 hour -
Minority flags election petitions, youth unemployment and third-term agenda as democratic threats
1 hour -
Yamfo Traditional Council petitions President Mahama over security threat at College of Health
1 hour -
PUWU threatens industrial action over illegal takeover of Ghana Water Lands in Ashanti region
1 hour -
Minority accuses state of legitimising illegal gold and environmental destruction
1 hour
