Audio By Carbonatix
Vice President Professor Naana Jane Opoku-Agyemang has called for a moral reset in student governance.
Addressing a gathering of youth at the 2026 Pentecost Students and Associates–Ghana (PENSA–Ghana) Conference, the Vice President emphasised that the halls of academia are the primary forge for the nation’s future character.
She warned that the habits formed in student politics today—particularly regarding the management of financial resources—will determine the quality of Ghana’s national leadership tomorrow.
“On your campuses, leadership is taking shape in how group work is handled, who is included or excluded, and whether influence is used to lift others or advance yourself," she observed. "These moments really allow themselves as leadership tests, but they are precisely that. This is important. As campus leaders, for example, if you collect dues from your fellow students, prioritise the entire student population.”
She urged student executives to view every cedi collected not as a personal kitty but as a sacred trust meant to serve the collective interest, particularly for the most vulnerable students who struggle to pay these levies.
Beyond the boardroom, the Vice President turned her attention to the classroom, linking academic integrity to professional credibility. In an age where digital tools have made shortcuts more accessible, she challenged the delegates to choose the difficult path of honesty.
Her warning was clear: the unethical practices cultivated in the lecture hall often graduate into the workplace, eroding the foundations of national institutions. She argued that true ambition is only sustainable when grounded in service and ironclad values.
The PENSA-Ghana Conference, known for drawing thousands of students from across the country’s tertiary institutions, served as the ideal platform for this state of the youth address.
The Vice President’s message focused on three core pillars:
- Inclusivity: Ensuring that leadership does not become an exclusive club for the powerful.
- Fiscal Transparency: Creating open-book systems for the management of student dues.
- Value-Based Ambition: Realigning success with service to others.
Professor Opoku-Agyemang concluded by encouraging the students to see themselves not as "leaders of tomorrow", but as active guardians of integrity today.
Latest Stories
-
Meet Emelia Naa Ayeley Aryee, the Ghanaian Gender Advocate helping couples overcome infertility stigma
25 minutes -
Oil pulls back as traders look for progress on US-Iran talks
1 hour -
The proposed imposition of a 0.75% fee on Mobile Money-To-Bank transfers raises serious concerns regarding fairness, financial inclusion, and the underlying principle of interoperability within the digital financial ecosystem
1 hour -
Trump raises refugee ceiling by 10,000 to bring in more white South Africans
1 hour -
One killed and others missing after chemical explosion at US paper mill
1 hour -
First Ghanaians set to be repatriated from South Africa over anti-immigrant protests
2 hours -
Deliver or be questioned – Majority Chief Whip warns OSP
2 hours -
Crime is everywhere – Dafeamekpor slams OSP’s Accra-centred operations
2 hours -
Don’t be cocooned in Accra – Dafeamekpor pushes OSP to invade districts
2 hours -
Free sanitary pads and pad bank Initiative cut teenage pregnancy in Bosomtwe – Girl Child coordinator
3 hours -
Asunafo North Municipal Assembly deploys DL-Rev Software to tackle revenue shortfall
3 hours -
General Mosquito promised to ‘annihilate’ NPP – Dafeamekpor reveals details of earlier tour
3 hours -
Asiedu Nketia has been touring since 2021, not plotting new campaign, says Dafeamekpor
4 hours -
Apple, Google push for judicial oversight in Canada online safety bill
4 hours -
Micron joins $1 trillion club as AI race powers memory chip boom
4 hours