Audio By Carbonatix
Speaker of Parliament, Anita Among, has condemned the blocking of the MPs led by Leader of the Opposition Hon Joel Ssenyonyi from visiting the Lubowa hospital construction site.
Speaker Among has now sent Deputy Speaker, Thomas Tayebwa, to visit the hospital site, putting government to task on why the site is a no go zone for Parliament.
“We are not asking for too much, we are actually helping you; I looked at the letter of the Minister of Health to the LoP, she just said good luck. What does that mean?” she said.
She added: “I am going to assign my Deputy Speaker to go to Lubowa with MPs and inspect and give us a report”.
The Leader of the Opposition, Hon Joel Ssenyonyi, had led a team of Opposition legislators to inspect the site and construction of the proposed international hospital located off Kampala – Entebbe highway on Monday 26 February 2024.
Attorney General Kiryowa Kiwanuka was asked whether oversight is no longer a constitutional duty of Parliament.
“The last time I checked it [oversight] was still in the statute book; the oversight role of Parliament still exists,” said Hon Kiwanuka.
MP Margaret Rwabushaija (NRM, Workers) was unmoved. She said visiting the hospital site is a safety concern for MPs.
“They are sealing it off and nobody should go there because it is a ghost; coming when they are armed and our members are not armed is threatening, one day we will come and see when our people are shot,” she said.
3rd Deputy Prime Minister, Hon Rukia Nakadama, promised action, and that she would liaise with the Ministry of Health to get to the bottom of the matter.
“I am going to look into that matter with the Ministry of Health; we are going to look into that matter so that members can visit that area,” she said.
But MP Ibrahim Ssemujju (FDC, Kira Municipality) watered down Hon Nakadama’s position, saying the Ministry of Health has failed to supervise the hospital construction and surrendered their role to the Office of the Prime Minister.
“I am now shocked that the PM said she is going to consult the Minister of Health; the Auditor General said they are paying money for work that has not even been certified to the tune of $70 million; that project was supposed to be constructed within 48 months,” he said.
Hon. Emmanuel Ongiertho (FDC, Jonam County) said government should be clear on whether MPs should take any interest in the hospital at all.
“Is this facility there? Is it being constructed, and if we have to forget about it, we forget about it,” he said.
Distributed by APO Group on behalf of Parliament of the Republic of Uganda.
Latest Stories
-
Kofi Jumah reportedly hospitalised as GH¢55m bail conditions remain unmet
3 minutes -
‘Behind the Lens with Queen Liz’ explores concepts of heaven and jannah
12 minutes -
Quality Insurance marks 30 years with push for women-focused innovation, trust-building
17 minutes -
Ghana’s Ambassador to Libya commends CEO of Afro Arab Group
17 minutes -
Nkwanta crisis: Fresh gunfire sends residents fleeing; 26-year-old rider shot
18 minutes -
Two BECE candidates killed in motor crash en route to Exam in Upper West
18 minutes -
PSG, Manchester United lead race for FC Nordsjaelland star Prince Amoako Jnr
20 minutes -
Lawra MP urges BECE candidates to avoid malpractice, assures support
23 minutes -
Korle Bu laboratory scientists demand retraction from doctors over ‘false’ claims
39 minutes -
NHIA waives NHIS fees and waiting period under new ‘STORM’ initiative
42 minutes -
GTDC CEO Prof. Kobby Mensah named among top 12 global leaders shaping place branding
42 minutes -
Large accounting losses, but is the Bank of Ghana truly policy solvent?
44 minutes -
The Bank of Ghana is winning the inflation war, but who will pay the hospital bill?
49 minutes -
BECE candidates stranded as Nyankrom residents block roads over ‘death trap’ network
49 minutes -
Walking on One Leg of the Tripod: The IMF endgame in Ghana
50 minutes