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Tuesday, July 14, 2026
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“Come forward, confess, pay back with interest and walk away free” – Franklin Cudjoe to looters

Roads Minister’s justification For Arbitrarily Stopping Toll Collection Insulting – Franklin Cudjoe
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In a highly critical, structurally reformative, and uncompromised public governance intervention shared via an Official Facebook Post on 14 July, 2026, founding President of policy think tank IMANI Africa, Franklin Cudjoe, took a direct swipe at the nation’s premier mediation body. Reacting to the strategic pushback and highly mobilized demonstrations surrounding the recent detention of key political figures, the prominent policy analyst bypassed polite diplomatic protocol to demand aggressive accountability. Warning that calls for calm must not serve as a cover for state looters to escape justice, Cudjoe declared: “Peace Council should encourage all looters still alive to come forward, confess, pay back with interest and walk away.”

The publication arrives at a crucial point of civic and political re-evaluation, following a wave of partisan protests staged at the Economic and Organised Crime Office (EOCO) over the arrest of opposition communicator Dennis Miracles Aboagye. As political tension rose, traditional mediation bodies like the National Peace Council issued standard, cautionary appeals aimed at preserving public order and reducing partisan friction. However, Cudjoe’s bold intervention forcefully reframes the issue, arguing that the true threat to national peace is not the friction arising from law enforcement, but the systematic, unpunished theft of state funds. By calling for a national restitution model, the policy expert challenges the state to prioritize the aggressive recovery of stolen public resources over mere cosmetic peace-building.

The seasoned policy strategist structured his sharp national appeal, institutional critique, and anti-corruption roadmap around the following highlighted points:

1. Unyielding Recovery of Public Resources: Cudjoe argued that the state must not relent or be intimidated by organized partisan pressure when retrieving stolen public funds.

2. Exposing the Limitations of Cosmetic Peace: The post heavily criticized the Peace Council for merely talking about “rising tension” while ignoring the underlying economic crimes that trigger civic anger.

3. A Pragmatic Restitution Framework: The publication proposed a clear amnesty model where living looters are encouraged to confess, refund stolen wealth with interest, and avoid jail time.

4. Enforcing Civilized Law Enforcement Standards: The author concluded by reiterating that while the state must protect human rights during arrests, justice must never be compromised for political convenience.

Cudjoe’s heavy-hitting exposure strikes directly at a highly frustrating, deeply systemic vulnerability in Ghanaian anti-corruption efforts: the absolute failure to prioritize financial recovery over media spectacles. When state agencies engage in theatrical, high-profile arrests that drag on for years without retrieving a single cedi, the taxpayer loses twice—first to the initial theft, and second to the massive legal costs of prosecution. According to the publication, establishing an structured, interest-bearing restitution pathway offers a highly practical alternative to endless, politically charged litigation. Until our national institutions and moral watchdogs prioritize the actual return of stolen wealth over superficial diplomatic posturing, the fight against corruption will remain an expensive, unproductive theater.

Ultimately, this administrative review serves as an unyielding reality check for both state prosecutors and national mediators. Franklin Cudjoe’s brilliant policy commentary demonstrates that true, lasting peace cannot be built on a foundation of unpunished economic injustice. Until the National Peace Council and state investigators aggressively push for absolute fiscal accountability and direct financial restitution, the public square will remain a volatile battleground.

Do you agree with Franklin Cudjoe that the Peace Council should focus on urging corrupt officials to confess and refund stolen state money with interest, or must the state aggressively prosecute all offenders to the full extent of the law? Share your thoughts and join the discussion in the comments section below!

 

 

Source: Franklin Cudjoe, Official Facebook Post, 14 July, 2026

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