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News
Release
NPP
October 4,
2012
Why Ghana Cannot Afford Corruption
Speech By Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, 2012
Presidential Candidate of the New Patriotic Party, at
the Great Hall of the Kwame Nkrumah University of
Science and Technology on the 3rd of October 2012.
Mr Chairman, distinguished industrialist and statesman
Faculty and Students of KNUST
Fellow citizens, good evening.
Thank you all for your presence this evening at this
auditorium to talk about a subject that is of interest
to all of us. I refer to corruption. A university campus
and an audience of mainly young people must surely be
the appropriate venue for such an important
conversation.
As I go around our country in the course of this
election campaign, taking the NPP’s message to the
people, I am struck daily by the sheer volume of work
that we have to do in all spheres of life in this
country to make the lives of our people more tolerable.
Our needs are many. We must build more and better
schools and equip them to cope with the 21st century, we
have to train our teachers better and pay them better,
we need more doctors, nurses, laboratory technicians, we
need more engineers, we need potable water, we need
better roads, we need to build railways, we need modern
airports (not ones with potholes on the tarmac), we need
better sanitation, we need well-equipped workshops to
train our artisans, we need to find hundreds of
thousands of productive, well-paying jobs for the young
people of our country, and everybody listening to us
this evening can add his or her own must-do to the list.
Then you think about the statistics that say we have to
invest some $6 billion every year for the next ten years
simply to make up our infrastructure deficit. Then you
think of the arguments that some are making that Ghana
cannot afford to educate her young people to secondary
school level because, they say we do not have the means
and we cannot afford to do so, at least, not for the
next 20 years, and this from a government whose leader
is a beneficiary of free secondary education.
And you know it is time to confront the problem of
corruption so that what resources we have are used
prudently and urgently to promote the national interest.
It is time to confront the real problem of corruption
and the perception of corruption because even the
perception of corruption leads to a general lowering of
morale among the population.
Corruption has been a debilitating factor in the
management of our public finances so far, and it has
become an even more dangerous factor now that we have
oil and our economy is expanding but not creating the
needed jobs. As experience around the world has shown,
if we do not get our basics right, the increase in our
resources envelope will spell disaster instead of
providing the means for us to solve the many problems
that we have, the so-called oil curse.
I hope all of us in this room are aware of the dangers
corruption poses to our nation. But it is worth bearing
in mind that it is not only the headline corruption, the
type that involves politicians, that retards our
progress and hinders our development. The driver who
knowingly puts a faulty vehicle on the road with the
intention of paying bribes to the traffic policeman, the
policeman who takes a bribe to allow an unlicensed
driver on the roads, the planning official who allows a
house to be constructed on the waterway, the customs
official that accepts a bribe and allows goods in
without the payment of duties, the officials that allow
drugs to be imported into and exported out of our
country and all the everyday petty bribe taking that we
all put up with. All such actions constitute corruption
and retard our progress even if they do not attract
headlines.
Tonight, though, I want to concentrate my remarks on
corruption in government and by politicians. Unless we
tackle this problem, we run a real risk of cynicism
overcoming our politics and, thus, of a catastrophic
loss of confidence in our democracy.
Ghana cannot afford this, our forebears did not struggle
for Ghana to end up in such a sad state of affairs, and
I believe that we can, in this generation, deliver the
economic transformation that has eluded us so far if we
do the right thing.
Corruption has to be defeated; it reduces revenue to the
state; it holds back our economic growth; it leads to
the flight of capital out of the country and it inflates
the cost of running government. It results in a loss of
legitimacy and respect for legally constituted
authority. Corruption demoralises honest people and
fills them with uncertainty, mistrust and fear. It
stifles initiative and creativity and dampens
motivation. It undermines the merit system of rewards,
appointments and success and it encourages mediocrity,
laziness and incompetence.
Governments all over the world are plagued with
corruption. Except that, under some governments, like
our current one, the disease becomes a raging epidemic.
Corruption on any scale is expensive and has been
especially expensive to Ghana’s development under this
third NDC government.
Mr. Chairman, it is true that corruption is not an
exclusively Ghanaian problem. And countries that have
oil, in particular, have had real difficulties in coping
with oil resource generated corruption. We can learn
from the experience of others that, once branded
corrupt, it is almost impossible to have normal
commercial relations with the rest of world.
Since independence in 1957, some 55 years ago,
corruption has been a perennial problem for successive
governments and in trying to address the problem,
various governments have introduced a host of policies
and measures, including some unconventional and
draconian ones.
We have promulgated anti-corruption decrees with
provisions for lengthy jail terms; we have confiscated
the personal assets of public officials believed to have
been corruptly acquired; we have declared zero tolerance
against corruption; we have appealed to the good sense
of the Ghanaian through moral crusades for integrity and
given sermons on the sins of corruption; we have passed
anti-corruption laws; we have strengthened
anti-corruption institutions and undertaken public
sector, financial management and institutional reforms;
we have also ratified regional and international
anti-corruption conventions as an expression of our
commitment to the global fight against the menace of
corruption. And we have even tied people to the stake
merely on suspicion of their being corrupt and shot them
dead.
We have done all these, we have the laws, we have the
institutions and yet the problem persists. What is worse
has been the emergence of the cynical use of the problem
by the NDC for purely political gain.
You would recall that during the last election in 2008,
in an attempt to win votes, the NDC launched an all-out
propaganda onslaught against the NPP government. Some of
the allegations were so outlandish they should have been
laughed at and dismissed. Who among us would forget the
document that purported to show that Kufuor and his
ministers had more money in one relatively small local
bank than all the capital assets of all Ghanaian banks
put together? I think I was placed somewhere in the
middle of that list. We were falsely accused of stealing
Ghana’s entire gold reserves from the vaults of the
central bank.
Needless to say, four years on, the NDC has not been
able to prosecute or convict a single NPP Government
official or party functionary for corruption. On the
contrary, all the evidence today is about corruption by
NDC government officials and their supporters. The state
of affairs would seem to give credence to that other
cynical slogan of “Obiara ba, saa”, which is what our
opponents would like the electorate to believe so they
can cover their disrespect for the electorate. This time
around, however, there is an important difference,
political opponents are not digging up dirt or smearing
government officials with manufactured lies. The large
scale corruption in the government has been exposed by
no less a personality than the Attorney General of the
Republic.
So, should we just throw our hands in the air in despair
and say nothing can be done or do we take stock and
examine if there may be some new, fresh approaches to
tackling corruption that might be more effective?
Ladies and Gentlemen, I do not think we can throw our
hands in the air, and it is not true that “Obiara ba,
saa”. There are differences. We have a responsibility to
work to grow confidence in our politics. We have to work
together to tackle this. We, in the NPP, understand that
the good people of Ghana are weary of the debilitating
impact of pervasive corruption on our society and simply
want their government to fix the problem. They want it
fixed not with words but action. Improving the scale of
integrity in society is an unwritten mandate of every
government, but fighting corruption is a constitutional
imperative imposed on the State, headed by the President
and government. Indeed, Article 35(8) of the
Constitution of the Republic enjoins the state to “take
steps to eradicate corrupt practices and the abuse of
power”. With your help, I want to be the President who
fixes the problem of corruption in our country.
Fellow citizens, I, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, have a
strong personal commitment to fighting corruption and,
along with my party, the New Patriotic Party, we have
thought long and hard about how to turn that commitment
into practical policies and programmes that will have a
real impact on reducing significantly the damaging
spread and cost of corruption.
The NPP Government of President John Agyekum Kufuor
showed its commitment to the fight against corruption
through the enhancement of anti-corruption legislative
framework. We recall the passage, among others, of the
following laws:
a) Public Procurement Act 2003 (Act 663)
b) Financial Administration Act 2003 (Act 654)
c) Internal Audit Agency Act 2003 (Act 658)
d) Financial Administration Regulations, 2004 (L.I.
1802)
e) Whistleblower Act 2006 (Act 720)
f) Anti-Money Laundering Act 2008 (Act 749)
I do not claim that these sets of laws solved the
problems but they certainly helped to begin to change
attitudes. Unfortunately, with the coming into office of
the NDC, a cavalier attitude has been adopted to these
laws and deliberate attempts have been made to frustrate
the intentions behind the legislation. I refer here, in
particular, to the bastardisation by the NDC of the
Public Procurement Act.
Ladies and Gentlemen, so what will an Akufo-Addo
administration do to tackle the problem?
It is my belief that the fight against corruption must
start with an incorruptible President. I can assure you,
in all humility, that I am not, have never been and will
never be corrupt. I can also assure you that as your
President, I will NOT condone corruption in my
Government. I bring to the table and to the Office of
President of this great country an unblemished track
record of personal integrity and fortitude. I invite you
to bank on my essential leadership attributes and make
me your president. I will lead a strong fight against
corruption in this country.
I shall aim to bring about a sustainable reduction in
corrupt behaviour to protect the public purse and offer
the Ghanaian people value for their money to improve
economic and social development.
Mr. Chairman, Distinguished Ladies and Gentlemen:
Permit me to use this platform to reiterate what I have
already told my colleagues, party leadership and
associates here and abroad: if your idea is to make
corrupt money in Government, then there will be no room
for you in my government. If you think of public office
as a shortcut to making money, then find some other
venture to engage your time and energies, because there
will be no room under an Akufo-Addo government for
self-enrichment in politics. The NPP is certainly a
pro-business and pro-people party, and my government
will provide an atmosphere conducive for legitimate
businesses to flourish, but making corrupt money as a
politician or through politics during my tenure as
President is not an option that I am prepared to
tolerate under my watch.
I believe the time has come for us to end the business
of going into politics to enrich ourselves. We need to
change the culture of seeking wealth through politics
and seeing politics as an avenue for financial gain.
This approach to politics has debased what should be the
essence of public office - the spirit of service for the
common good. I, as your President, will lead by example,
and will not allow corrupt, greedy and self-serving
politicians in my Government. And I urge you, fellow
Ghanaians, to hold me to this sacred promise.
Ladies and Gentlemen,
The declaration of assets is a constitutional obligation
imposed on the President, the Vice President, Ministers,
deputy Ministers, and holders of senior level positions
in the Judiciary, Parliament and the Executive. I
certainly intend to declare my assets, as I have always
scrupulously done and shall demand from my Ministers
that they declare their assets within the statutory
period. I recall that the late President (may his soul
rest in peace) made great play to the gallery, just as
some others are doing today, about how he would publicly
declare his assets and his ministers would do the same;
and yet when it came to it and the press made
investigations, many of his ministers had not even
declared their assets, within the stipulated period. My
own view is that the nation will benefit from the public
disclosure of the declared assets, but I also
acknowledge the strong views that some people hold and
the cultural sensitivities that exist in our country
about property ownership in our society. I believe that
Parliament should be the proper forum to debate these
questions that are being asked and, as President, I will
ask the honourable House to revisit promptly the matter
on a bi-partisan manner and put it to a free vote,
which, hopefully, will put the matter to rest in all our
interest.
My Government will pass the Right to Information Bill
into law. We will strengthen the access to information
in every Ministry, Department and Agency. We will also
improve the archival management, including record
keeping and information retrieval systems in the public
sector, to facilitate the effective implementation and
utilisation of the Right to Information Bill when it
becomes law. We know that transparency protects
officials and the public in dealing with the public
purse. The public have the right to know what
politicians and public officials do in their name.
Experience shows, Mr Chairman, that we have to go beyond
just passing the appropriate laws and designing
Anti-Corruption Action Plans. Ultimately, the only way
to ensure that the strategies are implemented and
corruption is combated is to mobilise the necessary
political will. Indeed, I believe that political will is
the most critical ingredient in the fight against
corruption everywhere. My government will cooperate with
investigations of anti-corruption agencies so that they
function effectively without let or hindrance.
An Akufo-Addo government will also:
• Improve governance and management practices in the
public sector to eliminate the bad management practices
that lead to corruption;
• Amend the relevant sections of the Criminal and Other
Offences Act (1960) Act 29, particularly sections
239-257, to make corruption a felony rather than a
misdemeanor;
• Introduce stiffer punishments for corruption to make
it a high-risk, low-gain activity and make the theft of
state funds more expensive for the criminal;
• Support and provide anti-corruption institutions such
as the CHRAJ, Economic and Organised Crime Office (EOCO),
Financial Intelligence Centre (FIC) and the Ghana Police
Service with greater financial resources to recruit,
train, engage and retain a large number of technical
personnel to investigate and fight corruption throughout
the country;
• Provide the requisite resources to ensure the vigorous
implementation of the National Anti-Corruption Action
Plan (2012-2021) developed by a coalition of
anti-corruption experts and institutions led by CHRAJ;
• Introduce legislation to improve corruption reporting,
investigations and follow-up systems, and to make it:
(a) compulsory for every head of a public sector
institution to establish and effectively operate an
Anti-Corruption Policy and Unit and (b) a criminal
offence for a public official to fail to report
corruption;
• Work with appropriate state institutions such as the
National Commission for Civic Education (NCCE), CHRAJ,
the Public Services Commission and the Ministry of
Education to develop an integrity-centred core
curriculum of ethics for public office holders at all
levels;
• Continue with programmes to shed the light of
transparency and accountability in governmental
processes throughout the country; and
• Institutionalise, what I call, the “Anas Principle”,
to create a culture of positive fear to discourage
corrupt practices. A special squad, made up of some of
our best young talents, who will be well trained and
well disciplined, will be created within the established
anti-corruption agencies to keep the fight against
corruption alive everywhere in the country.
Mr. Chairman, Ladies and Gentlemen,
The NPP has a track record of protecting the public
purse and we will endeavour to improve on the record. I
am afraid it is not possible to say the same about the
current government.
Under this government, it is difficult, Mr Chairman, to
find any evidence of any attempt to get value for money
in any public financial transaction. In all my years in
public service, until 2009, I had not come across such a
blatant and costly disregard for the principles and
obligations of democratic accountability by a
constitutional government under a democratic rule. Under
the NDC, the abuse of public office for private gain has
grown in scope and scale to become one of the gravest
issues affecting the economy and governance in the
country. Let me give you just a couple of examples.
The 5.7km Ofankor-Achimota Road, which the NPP was
constructing with GH¢43.2 million, has, after a 3-year
delay, just been completed by the NDC for GH¢137
million. That amount, fellow Ghanaians, is only GH¢20
million less than the GH¢158 million the NPP was going
to spend on the 31.7km Nsawam-Suhum stretch, to build a
dual carriageway with asphalt concrete surfacing and an
interchange at Suhum.
Public contracts are now routinely awarded by sole
sourcing. Very worrying is the fact that this sole
sourcing regime is most prevalent in contracts awarded
from two key ministries, Education and Roads.
We have heard Members of Parliament on the Minority side
allege that over 80 per cent of public procurements are
awarded by sole sourcing; the government has not
bothered to contradict them. The blatant disregard of
the legal requirement to subject public contracts to a
competitive tender process is denying the people of
Ghana value for their money. I do not use such strong
words lightly:
Section 13 of the Public Procurement Act (Act 663)
states:
(1) The [Public Procurement] Board shall within three
months after the end of each year, submit to the
Minister [of Finance] a written report indicating the
activities and operations of the Board in respect of the
preceding year.
(2) The annual report shall include a copy of the
audited accounts together with the Auditor-General’s
report and the Minister shall as soon as practicable
after receipt of the annual report submit the report to
Parliament with such comment as the Minister considers
necessary.
In this report the Minister must explain to Parliament
why certain procurements were done through sole
sourcing. Fellow citizens, my information is that not a
single such annual report has been submitted to
Parliament since the NDC was voted back to office in
2009. It is probably not a mere coincidence that, under
the NDC, the Chairman of the Public Procurement
Authority is a presidential staffer, whilst the CEO is a
former NDC MP. During our time we followed the law and
appointed known and respected technocrats to head the
PPA.
As I speak, the 2011 Auditor-General’s Report has not
been laid in Parliament. This ought to have been done by
the end of June 2012. If one recalls that it was the
2010 report, which was laid on the due date, that
exposed the judgment debts scandals, one wonders if
there are any more such scandals lurking within the
report to explain the delay in the laying of the 2011
Auditor-General’s Report.
Then there are the inexplicable rises in the cost of
government projects. A six classroom block that was
being built at some GH¢85,000 4 years ago, under the NPP,
is now priced at over GH¢240,000. This means the NDC is
spending three times more money to build the same type
of schools that the NPP was building. These are the
types of things that undermine confidence in government
and limit our capacity to develop.
The same trend can be seen in operations in the road
sector. The effect of the Public Procurement Act in the
award of road contracts is vividly demonstrated by the
difference in costs between NPP and NDC constructed
roads, where sadly, the NDC resorts mainly to sole
sourcing. The Minority Leader, the Honourable Member of
Parliament for Suame, Osei Kyei-Mensah Bonsu, has
already made the case that while the construction of one
kilometre of asphalt covered road carried was between
$450,000-$600,000 under the NPP, it now costs between
$1.4 million and $1.6 million, under the NDC. The
consequence of that kind of inflated cost of
construction is that in the last 3 years, less than
1,000km of roads have been added to the road network as
compared to the annual NPP average of 4,750km. Such is
the expensive nature of road construction these days
that we are even told that luxurious BMW 7 series are
now purchased as project vehicles for Road Ministers. A
better Ghana it is, indeed, but it appears only for the
chosen few…
Since the payment of judgement debts is very much in the
news and government spokespersons have sought to use the
“Obiara ba, saa” argument to defend criminal behaviour,
it is worth pointing out that in all the first four
years of President Kufuor, beginning with me as Attorney
General and Yaw Osafo-Maafo as Finance Minister, I am
informed that less than GH¢4 million was paid out in
judgment debt. Last year, the NDC admitted to paying
some GH¢642 million, almost equivalent to the GH¢676
million annually that my government, God willing, is
pledging to spend on improving and expanding facilities
and teaching at our secondary schools. No wonder the NDC
is shouting from the rooftops that Free SHS is
impossible. Their focus is mainly on expenditure that
benefits them and their cronies and leaves the people of
Ghana without the basic amenities to improve their
standard of living. An Akufo-Addo government will spend
on things like Free SHS that will over the next four
years benefit more than 2 million of our children.
In less than four years, this government has spent more
money than the NPP did in 8 years and yet they have
little to show for it. Secondly, this government has
borrowed more money than all other governments put
together in 52 years. I ask, as all of us must ask, “na
sika no wo hene?”
Mr Chairman, with the NDC set to launch their 2012
manifesto tomorrow, I think it is important to remind
them and- even more so, the electorate, of just one key
promise they gave in 2008:
They said that by the end of 2012, the NDC would have
“created a society in which corruption is punished, and
probity, integrity and dedicated service are applauded
and appreciated.” Linked to this were the following
promises and I quote:
i. As a party committed to Social Democracy, the NDC
seeks partnership with Citizens to eradicate corruption
by
a) deepening political accountability and transparency
in government
b) enhancing the disclosure of budgets, public
expenditures and procedures adopted in public
procurements.
ii. The new NDC government shall enact into law the
Freedom of Information Bill to facilitate access to
official information, buttressing our commitment to
disclosures.
iii. The NDC will introduce a strong program of
encouraging citizens to demand accountability and “blow
the whistle” on corrupt officials and practices.
iv. The NDC Government will revise the law and format
for Assets Declaration in order to make it more
functional and effective in ensuring probity and
accountability.
v. Simply put, NDC will make corruption a high risk
activity for political and public office holders.
Perhaps, the President will be kind, accessible and
affable enough to tell Ghanaians why his government
chose to break the promise they made to Ghanaians on
corruption and in the process give politics a bad name.
It is not difficult to understand, Mr Chairman, why
Ghanaians are skeptical about the President’s commitment
to fighting corruption. Indeed, two of the most
controversial international transactions associated with
this government, or any other government of the Republic
for that matter, the $10 billion STX housing deal from
Korea and the Embraer 190 Jet and the accompanying $17
million hangar from Brazil were both led by him in his
capacity then as Vice President.
The President in his major policy statement, (that is
how he called it) said he would appoint a Sole
Commissioner, in his own words, “to thoroughly examine
the judgment debt and negotiated settlement conundrum”.
With all respect, Mr President, what Ghanaians really
need is their money back, that is what they need. It is
very clear to Ghanaians that at least GH¢360 million of
these payments made to Woyome, and others were bogus. We
urge our care-taker President, as a matter of urgency,
to focus on expediting the legal process to retrieve the
money and return it to the public purse. We don’t need a
sole commissioner to review a matter that is already in
court. We want our money back!
Ladies and Gentlemen, this then is the NDC record. The
record on which they are trying to stand today.The
record upon which they seek four more years. Fellow
citizens, your verdict should be ‘No!’ It’s been four
wasted years. No more! No more payment of huge sums of
money for no work done. No more misapplication of public
funds. Enough is enough!
We need to protect the public purse. We need to protect
our future. We need to change now and move Ghana
forward.
Come December 7, Mr Chairman, by the Grace of God, and
with your mandate, if I am elected President, I, Nana
Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, give you my word, I will protect
the public purse jealously. I pledge to ensure that the
nation gets value for money to improve public services
and drive the important agenda of economic
transformation. Ghana deserves this and the NPP, under
my leadership, will deliver this.
Mr. Chairman,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
I thank you sincerely for your kind attention.
God bless you
God bless Ghana.
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