DEAR reader, have you read the Auditor-General’s Report on the COVID-19 Alleviation Funds?
It has broken every Ghanaian heart.
In 2020, during the country’s worst tragedy in living memory, as hundreds of our compatriots were gasping to COVID deaths, some political actors and public servants were allegedly fattening their private bank accounts with moneys donated, borrowed or taken from our Consolidated Fund.
It was equivalent to picking the pockets of accident victims in the throes of death.
For fear that nothing will ever come out of these revelations, I want to share some best practices to urge civil society groups, including the Christian Council, Ghana Pentecostal Council, the Chief Imam, Head of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission, Occupy Ghana, Imani Africa, TUC, CLOGSAG, the three teacher unions and nurses/midwives to issue press statements, rise up and refuse to sit down until government acts or Parliament sets up a bi-partisan probe into the matter.
Account
Before I share the best practices, however, I wish to reproduce the information given by the Minister for Transport when he appeared before Parliament on June 10, 2021 to give account of the contract signed with Frontiers Healthcare Services, the company that undertook COVID testing at Kotoka International Airport (KIA).
He said per the concession agreement, Ghana Airports Company was supposed to receive US$10 per test conducted, and Frontiers Healthcare was to keep US$140 as their service charge.
Each passenger tested paid $150.
He told Parliament: “Between September and December 2020, the total amount realised from the COVID-19 testing at the KIA was US$17,590,500. So, as per the concession agreement, Frontiers Healthcare Services retained US$16,202,200 for its services.
The Ghana Airports Company Limited (GACL), on the other hand, received US$1,167,300 from testing a total number of 117,187 passengers.”
(Source:https://thebftonline.com/11/06/2021/govt-earns-us1-16m-in-royalties-from-airport-covid-19-test/)
If the Minister’s facts were correct, how come that on September 26, 2022, GACL’s CEO told JoyNews that her company was unaware of the amount of money made by Frontiers Healthcare Service?
(The interview was procured on the back of a request by Multimedia Broadcasting on the strength of the Right to Information Law).
When JoyNews sought to know the modalities that led to the selection of Frontiers for the contract, the GACL boss said her company “is not in possession of the chronology of the processes that led to the selection and award to Frontiers Health Services to provide the COVID-19 testing at the Airport.”
Question: Who selected Frontiers?
Who negotiated and agreed on US$10 for Ghana and US$140 for Frontiers? Ghanaians must know.
Now, dear reader, below are what I consider best practices in other parts of Africa.
On January, 30, 2021, Malawi’s President Lazarus Chakwera fired his Labour Minister and arrested 19 officials for fraudulent use of funds meant to fight the coronavirus.
What was the Minister’s offence? An Auditor General’s Report discovered that he used 613,000 Kwacha (about US$800) worth of COVID-19 funds for allowances during a trip to South Africa with the President.
($1 = 779.4900 Kwacha).
The President, in a televised address, said, “I cannot have in my Cabinet any individuals who either spend money budgeted for one thing on something else or do not ask tough questions to ensure that the money they are spending on something was budgeted for that purpose.”
To the whole country, he declared, “There are no sacred cows.”
To the country’s civil servants, the President warned, “If the finger of evidence points to you as one of the
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