Audio By Carbonatix
Ranking Member of Parliament's Education Committee, Peter Nortsu-Kotoe, has expressed concern about the fact that the committee is forced to annually intervene before the West Africa Examination Council (WAEC) receives funding from the government of Ghana for its operations.
This follows the West African Examinations Council's (WAEC) statement that it might have to postpone the upcoming Basic Education Certificate Examination (BECE) due to financial constraints.
According to the Director of Public Affairs at WAEC, John Kapi, the council needs about GH₵90 million to conduct the exams.
Mr Kapi said although the exam papers had been printed, the council lacked no funds to distribute them and send WAEC officials to monitor the exams.
Speaking on JoyNews' AM show, Mr Nortsu-Kotoe, said, “If we continue this way, I do not think WAEC has a brighter future in this country. You see, the money that is due to WAEC is the registration fees approved by parliament to be released to WAEC.”
The Member of Parliament for the Akatsi North Constituency noted that the government had committed to covering all fees for BECE and WASSCE candidates, with allocations budgeted and approved accordingly.
However, he highlighted that the government is currently facing challenges in releasing the funds.
Mr Nortsu-Kotoe pointed out that without the fees paid by private BECE candidates, WAEC would have struggled to adequately prepare for the examinations.
“That is the challenge, and it is unfortunate that we are treating WAEC this way. In other countries like Nigeria, Sierra Leone, the Gambia and Liberia as soon as parliament approves the money and the year begins, WAEC is given every money it works with, but it is the reverse in Ghana,” he lamented.
Meanwhile, the government says it has released some 47 million cedis of the nearly 95 million owed WAEC.
The Council says it can conduct the exam with this amount but cannot pay its debt.
The examinations council says it is hoping to deploy its staff by July 4.
“We will deploy our staff by the 4th of July. Our vehicles are going to start moving, and staff will also start moving on the 4th of July. We believe that if they can process the money before the 4th of July, we would be in a position to conduct the examination as we have stated,” Spokesperson for WAEC, John Kapi explained.
The examination is scheduled to commence on Monday, July 8 and end on Monday, July 15, 2024, at all centres across the country.
Latest Stories
-
Ivory Coast or Ghana: who really has the best performing economy?
18 minutes -
2nd Deputy BoG Governor urges businesses to avoid speculation and support Cedi stability
19 minutes -
AMA sympathises with June 3 disaster victims, says steps taken to prevent recurrence
28 minutes -
Ban on plastic materials will be difficult to enforce – EPA
34 minutes -
Wontumi trial: Court sets July 3 for judgment
35 minutes -
“We expect respect for our sovereignty” — Bagbin rejects foreign pressure on African values
44 minutes -
Richard Jakpa calls for urgent irrigation investment in Upper West, warns against youth unemployment
45 minutes -
Two people shot dead amid Kenya protests against US Ebola quarantine centre plan
46 minutes -
Hon. Julius Debrah: Leading with wisdom, respect and dedication to Ghana
48 minutes -
I quit a high-paying engineering job to find my path in business – Pinkberry CEO
56 minutes -
My first attempt to bring Pinkberry to Ghana failed – CEO recounts journey
1 hour -
Mahama right to seek legal advice on Anti-LGBTQ bill – Christian Council
1 hour -
Ice cream 10 cedis? I’d rather buy fufu – Pinkberry CEO on Kumasi store struggle
1 hour -
Residents evicted from Savannah Junction near Tema as private developer enforces court ruling
1 hour -
JoySports partners the Guardian UK for World Cup coverage
2 hours