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Suspected goat thief burnt to death, one other arrested at Marban

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The incident took place at Marban in the Ashanti Region The incident took place at Marban in the Ashanti Region

A violent incident has occurred in the Atwima Nwabiagya North District of the Ashanti Region, where one person has been burnt to death and another arrested for allegedly stealing goats and sheep at Esaso.

According to eyewitnesses, the suspects were apprehended by a mob at Marban, several miles away from the scene of the crime.

In an interview with OTEC News Reporter Kwame Agyenim Boateng, they said the incident took place on Tuesday, October 21, 2025, when the suspects, travelling in a Pregio commercial bus, stole six goats and six sheep.

However, their escape was thwarted when residents gave chase, leading to a pursuit through nearby communities.

Upon reaching Marban, the suspects were confronted, and one of them was caught and lynched by the angry mob.

The vehicle was also set ablaze.

The other suspect managed to flee but was later arrested by the police and is currently assisting with investigations.

The stolen animals have been recovered by the police at Adankwame, who have launched an investigation into the incident.

Here’s how much BoG gold coins are selling for on October 22

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Bank of Ghana's gold coin Bank of Ghana’s gold coin

The investment price of the Bank of Ghana’s (BoG) gold coins continues to decline despite the recent appreciation of the cedi against the US dollar.

The Central Bank introduced these gold coins as a strategic measure to discourage the hoarding of US dollars and absorb excess liquidity in the market, ultimately aiming to strengthen the cedi against major foreign currencies.

As of Wednesday, October 22, 2025, the BoG reported the following updated prices for its gold coins:

Here’s how much BoG gold coins are selling for on October 20

• The 0.25 oz coin is now selling at GH¢12,088.46.

• The 0.50 oz coin is priced at GH¢23,449.88.

• The 1.00 oz coin is selling for GH¢46,216.46

The Ghana gold coin is available in three denominations; one-ounce, half-ounce, and quarter-ounce, and can be purchased through commercial banks.

SP/MA

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ORAL  Gains Momentum as Seven Major Corruption Investigations Completed

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Ghana’s Attorney-General and Minister for Justice, Dr Dominic Ayine, has announced significant progress in the government’s flagship anti-corruption drive—Operation Recover All Loots (ORAL)—revealing that investigations into seven major corruption cases have been completed, with several others nearing conclusion.

The initiative, launched under the directive of President John Dramani Mahama, aims to recover stolen state resources and ensure accountability in public service management.

Bawumia’s conduct shows he’s bound to win – NPP’s Dormaa West Chairman

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Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia

Dormaa West Constituency Chairman of the opposition NPP, Kwame Owusu, has declared that the former Vice President’s temperament and style of leadership are clear indications of a man destined to win.

During Dr Bawumia’s visit to Dormaa West as part of his Bono Region tour, Mr Owusu praised the NPP flagbearer for his patience and maturity in handling political attacks, saying his focus on unity rather than division sets him apart.

“Everything indicates that Dr Bawumia is poised to win. This is evident in his conduct throughout the campaign—he does not respond to insults because he understands the greater responsibility of uniting everyone after the elections,” he stated.

Mr Owusu further recalled that the party’s morale was low before Dr Bawumia was elected flagbearer ahead of the 2024 polls, but credited him with reviving the NPP’s spirit and performance in the last election.

“If we are to be truthful, before Dr Bawumia was elected as flagbearer ahead of the 2024 polls, the party was in disarray. I believe we would not have secured more than 20 per cent of the votes had the elections been held at that time,” he said.

He applauded the national executives for holding an early congress, explaining that the decision will give the flagbearer enough time to mobilise support across the country.

“We also want to thank the party’s leadership for organising an early congress. This will give him enough time to prepare and campaign effectively,” he added.

DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.

DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.

Buffer Stock scandal: Allegations by AG are false and damaging

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Former Chief Executive Officer of the National Food and Buffer Stock Company, Abdul-Wahab Hanan Aludiba, has denied any involvement in the alleged corruption scandal linked to the company, following revelations by the Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Dr. Dominic Ayine.

At the Government Accountability Series held in Accra, Dr. Ayine disclosed that over GH¢40 million was allegedly transferred through Sawtina Enterprise to several individuals and entities — including Hanan — as part of what investigators suspect to be a money laundering scheme connected to the former CEO’s tenure.

In a statement issued on Wednesday, October 22, 2025, Hanan dismissed the Attorney General’s claims as false and damaging to his reputation, insisting he has no involvement in any wrongdoing.

“My attention has been drawn to recent statements made by the Honourable Attorney General during a press engagement, in which my name was mentioned in connection with allegations of corruption,” Hanan stated.

“I wish to state, respectfully, that these claims are untrue and do not reflect the facts of the matter.”

He further described the allegations as “deeply unfortunate”, stressing that he has no connection to the matters currently under investigation.

Hanan added that he has engaged legal counsel to review the issue and advise on the next steps to protect his integrity.

“I look forward to the opportunity to present my side and to have my day in court, where I am confident that the truth will be made clear,” he affirmed.

Read also

Full list of properties allegedly acquired by ex-Buffer Stock boss with stolen funds

 

 

Robbery suspect escapes from Ngleshie Amanfro Police custody in broad daylight

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In a shocking incident, the leader of a suspected robbery gang escaped from the Ngleshie Amanfro District Police Command in the full view of police officers on the afternoon of Thursday, October 16, 2025.

The fugitive, believed to be a Nigerian national, had been arrested earlier that morning together with two accomplices by a police patrol team attached to the command. They were handed over to Chief Inspector Dela Kumador and Constable Charles Tawiah, who were manning the station’s counter at the time.

According to Citi News sources at the command, the suspect was allowed to use the restroom without handcuffs and without supervision. He reportedly took advantage of the opportunity to escape custody.

Background

The arrests followed a dawn operation led by Inspector Noble Essuman after intelligence pointed to an ongoing robbery at Malam Junction around 4:00 a.m.

Upon arrival, the patrol team encountered a four-member gang — one wielding a pump-action gun while the others searched through the bags of victims believed to be traders travelling to the Volta Region.

The suspects allegedly seized an unspecified amount of cash and personal belongings.

According to police accounts, the robbers had earlier confronted the traders after accusing the driver of their Kia truck of scratching their Honda CR-V vehicle. The situation escalated when one of the robbers pointed a gun at the traders as they stepped out to inspect the alleged damage.

The patrol team, which had been on alert based on prior intelligence, intervened in the middle of the robbery. One suspect managed to flee with the firearm, but three others — including the gang leader — were arrested.

The suspects and the black Honda CR-V, which had a defective registration plate (DV 3145X), were subsequently transported to the police command.

However, a few hours later, the gang leader reportedly complained of a stomach upset and requested to use the restroom. He was allowed to do so without restraints and without any escort — a decision that proved costly.

When the suspect failed to return after a considerable period, the officers became alarmed. A search launched to trace him yielded no results.

Court proceedings and further investigations

The two remaining suspects were arraigned before the Weija Circuit Court on Monday, October 20, 2025.

Meanwhile, police have arrested the operator of a car rental business that allegedly leased the vehicle to the robbery gang. He is currently assisting with investigations.

The Honda CR-V used in the robbery has since been impounded by the police.

Efforts by Citi News to obtain an official comment from the Ngleshie Amanfro District Police Command have so far been unsuccessful.

Former NAFCO boss responds to AG claims

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Abdul-Wahab Hanan Aludiba is the former CEO of NAFCO Abdul-Wahab Hanan Aludiba is the former CEO of NAFCO

Former Chief Executive Officer of the National Food and Buffer Stock Company (NAFCO), Abdul-Wahab Hanan Aludiba, has refuted corruption allegations made against him by the Attorney General, describing them as “false” and “deeply regrettable.”

The AG, in a media briefing on Wednesday, October 22, 2025, said investigators from the Economic and Organised Crime Office (EOCO) have traced several luxury properties and suspicious bank transactions linked to Abdul-Wahab, believed to have been financed with proceeds of crime.

However, in a statement issued on his social media page, Aludiba said he had no connection to the issues cited by the Attorney General and had instructed his lawyers to take the necessary steps to protect his reputation.

“I wish to state, respectfully, that these claims are untrue and do not reflect the facts of the matter. I have no involvement in the issues being referred to, and I find the comments deeply unfortunate,” the statement read.

See full list of properties allegedly acquired by former NAFCO CEO

He added that his legal team is currently reviewing the situation and will consider appropriate legal action, emphasising his determination to clear his name through due process.

“I look forward to the opportunity to present my side and to have my day in court, where I am confident that the truth will be made clear,” he said.

Aludiba was previously arrested by the EOCO on June 25, 2025, along with his wife, over allegations of large-scale financial impropriety during his tenure.

He was detained for two weeks before being granted bail of GH¢60 million with two sureties.

The former NAFCO CEO reiterated his commitment to ethical conduct, stating that he has always been guided by honesty, transparency, and integrity throughout his public service career.

See the statement below:

ID/AE

Ghana Sports enters new era with NSA–JKG Artificial Intelligence partnership – Ghana Latest Football News, Live Scores, Results

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Ghana’s National Sports Authority (NSA) has announced a landmark partnership with Just Keep Going Inc. (JKG) aimed at revolutionising the country’s sporting landscape through the integration of artificial intelligence, blockchain, and transparent sponsorship systems.

The collaboration, described as a first of its kind in Africa, seeks to modernise athlete development, streamline federation management, and attract global investment across all 54 national sports federations.

Led by JKG Founder and CEO Kevin Frey, who also serves on the International Board of Ethics for Artificial Intelligence (IBEAI), the initiative will introduce AI-powered performance tracking, digitize administrative operations, and build a sustainable funding framework for Ghanaian sport.

“We’re building a transparent, tech-driven ecosystem that empowers athletes and opens new channels for global sponsors and partners,” said Frey. “Just Keep Going is positioning Ghana as a model for how technology can transform sport and investment.”

Director General of the NSA, Yaw Ampofo Ankrah, emphasised that the collaboration extends beyond technology to trust and empowerment. “We’re opening Ghana’s sports sector to new possibilities, giving our athletes and young population the tools to compete globally while ensuring our systems remain transparent and accountable,” he said.

The partnership, according to the NSA, marks a major step toward digitizing Ghana’s sports governance and fostering data-driven growth across disciplines, including football, athletics, boxing, basketball, rugby, and weightlifting.

China Is The ‘New World’ – Kojo Bonsu

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Kojo Bonsu

 

GHANA’S AMBASSADOR to China, Kojo Bonsu, has described his host country as the “New World”, urging developing countries to learn from China’s experiences to improve.

According to him, developing African countries, especially Ghana, that aspire to properly and effectively transform and make life better for their citizenry, should learn from China.

Highlighting his expectations and aim as Ghana’s Ambassador to China, he said, “China has everything. This is the new world. If you want to develop without China, your development is nil or zilch.

 

“So I think this country’s experience is what every country should want to build on, especially a developing country like Ghana and African countries.”

Mr. Bonsu stated that China has made giant strides in its development, and serves as a yardstick of many countries.

According to him, he would work assiduously and make sure that his presence in China as Ghana’s ambassador would go a long way to help his country to develop at a lightning speed.

“We need to learn a lot, and we are going to pick a lot from here (China),” Kojo Bonsu confidently disclosed in an interview, which has been posted on Facebook.

He said Ghana and China have enjoyed fruitful working relations for over 65 years, promising to use his stay in China to significantly improve the Ghana-China relations for the mutual benefit of the two countries.

“My aim and expectations as Ghana’s Ambassador to China is to work and ensure that during my tenure, Ghana-China relations, which has been in existence for 65 years, will greatly improve.

“I’m very happy about Ghana-China working relations, and I’m going to work and make it better,” Kojo Bonsu said, adding “personally, I love China and I’m elated to be here, working for my country.”

 

FROM I.F. Joe Awuah, Kumasi

A Mix of Kim and Ye, What Do You Expect- Eyes Roll At North West’s New Look

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North West, daughter to American rapper Kanye West and Kim Kardashian has got netizens talking after pictures of her new look went viral.

The 12 year old is known for dressing up like an adult even in her teenager stage and all hands are pointing at her celebrity mum, Kim Kardashian.

“Wontumi made offers for a plea deal, but I turned them down” – A-G

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Dr Dominic Ayine, the Attorney General and Minister for Justice, has revealed that the embattled Ashanti Regional Chairman of the New Patriotic Party (NPP), Bernard Antwi-Boasiako, popularly known as Chairman Wontumi, made offers of a plea deal.

According to the Attorney-General, he turned down Wontumi’s plea deal in the case involving Akonta Mining Company Limited.

AG uncovers $2m overpayment to J.A. Plant Pool under DRIP contract

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Attorney General and Minister for Justice, Dominic Ayine, has disclosed that the previous New Patriotic Party (NPP) administration overpaid J.A. Plant Pool, the firm contracted under the District Roads Improvement Programme (DRIP), by an amount of $2 million, despite the total cost of the procured machines being just over $1 million.

According to him, “In the case of DRIP, they were overpaid, that is J.A Plant Pool was overpaid $2 million, the contract sum was $176 million. When we examined the invoices of payment, it was $178 million that was paid so right a way, there was a different of $2 million,” he disclosed at the Government’s Accountability Series on Wednesday.

“We noticed that, the DRIP equipment were over invoice by between 100 to 300 percent,” he added.

Dr Ayine further revealed that during the importation process, 190 additional pieces of equipment were shipped alongside the DRIP machinery and cleared at the port under the false claim that they formed part of the project. “We also realised that, 190 pieces of equipment were added and cleared without payment of tax, in other words, they were added to the list as if they were tax exempt,” he said.

He said the act resulted in tax evasion amounting to over GH₵38 million. ” When they did the analysis, it came out that GH₵38.7 million of taxes were evaded.”

The Attorney General stated that his office has directed J.A. Plant Pool to refund the excess payment to the state and has tasked the Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) to recover the outstanding tax obligations.

The DRIP was an initiative of the erstwhile Akufo-Addo government aimed at facilitating rapid infrastructure development across the nation at the district level.

Each Metropolitan, Municipal and District Assemblies received more than one machine, ranging from excavators and trucks to tipper trucks and other heavy road construction equipment.

DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.

DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.

Govt demands $2m refund from JA Plant Pool over DRIP contract irregularities

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Dr Dominic Akuritinga Ayine is the Attorney General and Minister of Justice Dr Dominic Akuritinga Ayine is the Attorney General and Minister of Justice

The Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Dr Dominic Akuritinga Ayine, has disclosed that the government has demanded a refund of $2 million from JA Plant Pool Ghana Limited after investigations revealed financial irregularities in the District Road Improvement Programme (DRIP) contract.

Speaking at the Government Accountability Series in Accra on Wednesday, October 22, 2025, Dr Ayine said the overpayment was discovered during a forensic review of the $176 million contract awarded to the company.

He explained that although the contract sum was stated as $176 million, records showed a total of $178 million was paid, resulting in an excess of $2 million.

FULL TEXT: Attorney General briefs media on alleged criminal activities at Buffer Stock Company

“In the case of DRIP, JA Plant was overpaid by $2 million. The contract sum was $176 million. On the face of the contract, that is the sum that was stated. When we examined the invoices of payments, it was $178 million that was paid. So, right away, there was a difference of $2 million. So, we asked that the $2 million be paid back by JA Plant Pool,” he stated.

The Attorney General further disclosed that the investigation uncovered tax evasion totalling GH¢38.7 million after 190 pieces of equipment were imported and cleared under false tax exemption claims.

“We also realised that 190 pieces of equipment were added and cleared without payment of tax. In other words, they were added to the release as if they were tax exempt,” he indicated.

Dr Ayine noted that when investigators analysed the data using the HS code, it was established that GH¢38.7 million worth of taxes were evaded.

He said a formal demand has been made for the company to refund both the overpaid amount and the unpaid taxes.

He also said that the audit detected significant over-invoicing of equipment purchased under the DRIP contract, with mark-ups ranging from 100 to 300 percent.

“For example, one piece of equipment that cost $40,000 was invoiced at $84,000. That is over 110%,” Dr Ayine added.

See full list of properties allegedly acquired by former NAFCO CEO

According to him, a team of investigators is currently conducting a detailed review of all equipment supplied under the programme to ensure that any criminal charges brought forward are well-founded and specific.

The findings, he said, form part of a broader government initiative to retrieve misappropriated funds and enforce accountability in public financial management.

MRA/AE

US Embassy official allegedly pickpocketed at ShattaFest

Full list of properties allegedly acquired by ex-Buffer Stock CEO

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Abdul-Wahab was arrested on June 25, 2025, together with his wife, Faiza Seidu Wuni Abdul-Wahab was arrested on June 25, 2025, together with his wife, Faiza Seidu Wuni

The Attorney General and Minister for Justice, Dr Dominic Akuritinga Ayine, has disclosed that the former Chief Executive Officer of the National Food and Buffer Stock Company (NAFCo), Hanan Abdul-Wahab, is subject of a major corruption investigation involving the alleged acquisition of luxury properties and assets believed to have been financed with stolen public funds.

Speaking at a press briefing in Accra on Wednesday, October 22, 2025, as part of the Government Accountability Series, Dr Ayine detailed findings that point to a pattern of financial misconduct and lavish spending by the former CEO during his tenure.

According to the Attorney General, investigators from the Economic and Organised Crime Office (EOCO) have traced several high-value properties and suspicious financial transactions linked to Abdul-Wahab, which they suspect were funded through proceeds of crime.

Abdul-Wahab was arrested on June 25, 2025, together with his wife, Faiza Seidu Wuni, for alleged large-scale financial irregularities at NAFCo.

He was detained by EOCO for two weeks before being granted bail of GH¢60 million with two sureties, while his wife was later released on a GH¢30 million bail.

The Attorney General disclosed that the illegally acquired assets linked to Abdul-Wahab include:

• A five-bedroom house at Chain Homes, valued at $1.625 million

• A three-bedroom house at Cantonments, purchased for $600,000

• Multiple plots of land at Airport Development Area, worth $750,000

• A 17-bedroom boutique hotel in Gumani, Tamale, acquired for $250,000

• A four-bedroom bungalow at Dworwulu, Accra, valued at GH¢4.14 million

• A 0.32-acre parcel of government land, purchased for GH¢307,200

SP/MA

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NSA partners JKG AI to drive Ghana’s sports transformation

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Yaw Ampofo Ankrah is the Director General of the National Sports Authority Yaw Ampofo Ankrah is the Director General of the National Sports Authority

Ghana is stepping boldly into a new era of sports development as the National Sports Authority (NSA) embarks on a landmark partnership with Just Keep Going Inc. (JKG) to infuse artificial intelligence, blockchain, and transparent sponsorship systems into the nation’s rapidly expanding sporting ecosystem.

The ground-breaking collaboration will transform how Ghana sports trains and supports athletes, manages federations and infrastructure, as well as attracting global investment.

The partnership aims to digitize federation operations, modernize performance tracking, and create sustainable funding pipelines across all 54 national sports federations.

By combining innovation, research and inclusion, the partnership will unlock dynamic new opportunities for athletes whilst positioning Ghana as a continental leader in sports technology and governance.

Led by Kevin Frey, Founder & CEO of JKG and Board Member of the International Board of Ethics for Artificial Intelligence (IBEAI), the collaboration emphasizes both cutting-edge technology and ethical responsibility.

Through this partnership, the NSA and JKG will leverage AI and blockchain to revolutionize sports governance, sponsorship intelligence, establish transparent sponsorship pipelines connecting local and global partners, and boost visibility to open up investment across football, boxing, athletics, basketball, rugby, weightlifting, and 48 other federations.

Most importantly, the project will empower athletes and federations through data-driven transparency and culturally inclusive development.

“We’re building a transparent, tech-driven ecosystem that empowers athletes and opens new channels for global sponsors and partners. With purpose-built digital platforms designed to streamline onboarding and collaboration, Just Keep Going is positioning Ghana as a model for how technology can transform sport and investment.”

Kevin Frey, Founder & CEO, Just Keep Going Inc said “This partnership is more than technology — it’s about trust, innovation, and empowerment. We’re opening Ghana’s sports sector to new possibilities, giving our athletes and young population the tools to compete globally while ensuring our systems remain transparent and accountable. The future of Ghana sport begins now.”

“This forward-thinking collaboration represents a major step toward modernizing Ghana’s sports landscape. By embracing innovation and transparency, the NSA and JKG are charting a new path for athlete development, investment attraction, and digital governance — proving that the future of sports truly begins in Ghana,” Yaw Ampofo Ankrah, Director General of the National Sports Authority added.

See the list of properties acquired by embattled ex-Buffer Stock with stolen funds

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Dr Dominic Ayine, the Attorney General and Minister for Justice, has revealed a list of properties acquired by embattled ex-Buffer Stock Abdul‑Wahab Hannan.

Hanan Abdul-Wahab is at the centre of a major corruption scandal involving the alleged acquisition of high-value properties.

Dr Ayine accused Hanan Abdul-Wahab of acquiring luxury assets by misappropriating public funds during his tenure.

Full list of properties allegedly acquired by ex-Buffer Stock boss with stolen funds

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The Attorney General and Minister for Justice, Dr. Dominic Ayine, has disclosed that former Chief Executive Officer of the National Food and Buffer Stock Company (NAFCO), Hanan Abdul-Wahab, is at the centre of a major corruption scandal involving the alleged acquisition of high-value properties using proceeds of crime.

Addressing journalists at a press briefing in Accra on Wednesday, October 22, as part of the Government Accountability Series coordinated by the Presidency Communications Directorate, Dr. Ayine outlined a list of luxury assets reportedly acquired by the former CEO with misappropriated public funds during his tenure.

According to the Attorney General, investigators from the Economic and Organised Office (EOCO) have traced several properties and bank transactions linked to Abdul-Wahab, which they believe were funded through illicit means.

Abdul-Wahab was arrested in June and detained by EOCO for two weeks before being granted bail in the sum of GH¢60 million with two sureties. He was picked up on June 25, 2025, together with his wife, over allegations of large-scale financial misconduct during his time in office.

While his wife was released earlier on a GH¢30 million bail, Abdul-Wahab remained in custody for several days, despite reports that he had met his bail conditions.

The opposition New Patriotic Party (NPP) criticised the bail terms, describing them as excessively harsh and politically motivated.

Dr. Ayine assured that government is committed to ensuring accountability and transparency in the case, adding that all assets found to have been acquired with stolen funds will be confiscated in accordance with the law.

According to the Attorney General, the illegally acquired properties include:

A five-bedroom house at Chain Homes, valued at $1.625 million
A three-bedroom house at Cantonments, purchased for $600,000
Multiple plots of land at Airport Development Area, worth $750,000
A 17-bedroom boutique hotel in Gumani, Tamale, acquired for $250,000
A four-bedroom bungalow at Dworwulu, Accra, valued at over GHS 4.14 million
A 0.32-acre parcel of government land, purchased for GHS 307,200

 

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Afenyo-Markin: Parliament yet to receive documents on 24-Hour Economy, other policies

Legal challenges, not Akufo-Addo, stalled anti-LGBTQ+ bill — Ntim Fordjour

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Member of Parliament for Assin South , Rev. John Ntim Fordjour, has dismissed claims that former President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo deliberately refused to assent to the controversial Human Sexual Rights and Family Values Bill, popularly known as the anti-LBGTQ+ bill.

In an exclusive interview on JoyNews’ AM Show, Rev. Ntim Fordjour clarified that legal challenges, not presidential inaction, prevented the bill from reaching the President’s desk for consideration.

“I have never said that anyone can blame President Nana Akufo-Addo for our loss. Neither did I say that President Akufo-Addo failed or refused to sign assent to the bill,” he said.

“When the hands of Parliament were stayed and enjoined from transmitting the bill, the President could not even have the privilege of receiving it to take a decision upon.”

The MP explained that from the early stages of the bill’s journey through Parliament, it faced multiple legal hurdles.

These challenges, he said, started from the first reading and stakeholder engagements through to the amendment stages.

“Even before the third reading, there were many legal challenges. A lot of dissenting opinions tested it in court, and determinations were made,” he noted.

According to Rev. Ntim Fordjour, just when Parliament thought all legal issues had been resolved and the bill could be transmitted, a fresh lawsuit emerged.

This new legal action placed an injunction on Parliament, effectively halting the process of forwarding the bill to the President.

The Human Sexual Rights and Family Values Bill, passed by Parliament in 2024, has sparked intense national debate, with supporters calling for swift presidential assent and critics raising constitutional and human rights concerns.

Rev. Ntim Fordjour maintained that it would be “unfair” to blame the former President for delays in the process, stressing that legal processes beyond the control of the Executive stalled the transmission of the bill.

Rethinking Ghana’s Economic Direction: A case against cosmetic stability

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The recent outburst by the Governor of the Bank of Ghana that foreign remittances have dwindled despite a strong local cedi, and that certain austerity measures were therefore necessary to reverse the trend, was quite ludicrous.

When your currency appears strong, even if backed by all the gold reserves in the world, but your economy remains a retail-based one with no homegrown secondary industries creating jobs, what outcome do you expect? A strong cedi cannot compensate for an economy that imports almost everything it consumes, raises limited domestic revenue from taxation, and continues to suffer from a negative balance of trade.

Without a robust industrial base and value-added production, currency strength becomes cosmetic and reflects monetary manipulation rather than genuine economic health.

The obsession with a strong cedi and the illusion of macroeconomic stability are distractions from the deeper structural problems that cripple Ghana’s economy. True economic stability cannot be achieved through currency gymnastics or interest rate acrobatics. It must come from production, not presentation.

A nation’s real strength is not measured by the exchange rate of its currency but by its ability to manufacture, process, and export goods while employing its citizens in sustainable industries.

When local production is weak, even the most stable currency is a deceptive symbol of fragility. Ghana’s fiscal managers have become overly fixated on satisfying foreign creditors and defending an artificial exchange rate rather than building internal economic confidence.

Instead of investing in industries that add value to raw materials, government policies continue to prioritize imports and short-term borrowing. This is why every global shock sends the cedi tumbling and inflation soaring. The country cannot tax itself into prosperity. A strong economy comes from creating, innovating, and exporting, not taxing citizens to death.

Have you ever looked at the visa application index of all fifty-four African countries? Just a glance shows which nations are truly investing in their people.

Countries like Namibia, Botswana, Morocco, and Mauritius enjoy visa-free entry to regions such as the Schengen zone, the United Kingdom, and large parts of Asia and Latin America. Yet these same countries do not impose visa requirements on nationals from richer countries who visit them.

Now look at West Africa, particularly Ghana. It is often the countries whose passports attract the fewest privileges abroad that impose the heaviest visa fees on others. We are told these arrangements are bilateral, but they are not.

They reflect a mentality of inferiority wrapped in arrogance,  what I call monkeys playing by sizes. The result is an economic policy that punishes both citizens and foreigners, shrinking investment and stifling tourism, while the government continues to cry about dwindling remittances.

As if visa restrictions were not enough, our leaders impose a chain of taxes on Ghanaians abroad who try to support their families. They tax remittances, they tax the trotro plane ticket you buy to come home, they tax the calling card you use to check on your mother, and they tax the used vehicle you import just to move around.

Because the government lacks a meaningful strategy for generating real revenue through productivity, it turns ordinary citizens into prey. Anyone doing slightly better than the government becomes an enemy of state policy.

Imagine Ghana offering visa-free entry to all African countries and African Americans. The flow of cultural and financial investment that would follow would far outweigh the few dollars collected at visa desks.

My own classmate would have visited Ghana in 2019, and I am sure the amount she would have spent here would have been ten times what government gains from visa fees. But because that money would circulate in the local economy instead of going directly into government coffers, it is not a priority.

Even traveling home has become a punishment. Take a look at a simple air ticket from America to Ghana and you will see ECOWAS levies, COVID levies, and other unthinkable charges that make the average fare nearly twice that of the UK. It is not because London is closer or busier.

It is because Ghanaian policymakers are either wicked, operating with a crude Keynesian misunderstanding of economics, or they simply do not know what they are doing.

The same taxation madness applies to communication. I once called South Africa with a five-dollar calling card and spoke for almost two hours. The same five-dollar card to Ghana lasts barely ten minutes. Why? Because of taxes.

It is the recipient country that taxes incoming calls so heavily that even talking to your family becomes a privilege. Instead of tackling such distortions, our Ministry of Communications would rather engage in comical shows about DStv fees or indulge in moral theatrics over social issues, leaving the real economic injustices untouched.

The uncanny spectacle welcomes us everywere- from our ports to our policies. A 2016 Toyota Corolla with a modest 1800cc engine costs about forty-five thousand cedis to clear at the port, nearly equivalent to its market value in the United States.

How does it make sense that the duty on a used car almost equals its worth? When you break down the import charges, you will even cry. We are still paying COVID-19 levies long after the pandemic, and nobody in power seems embarrassed by this absurdity.

This slash-and-burn style of governance, where citizens are bled for every cedi, reflects a government that has lost all sense of economic reason.

Leadership continues to prioritize control over creativity and taxation over transformation. Instead of fostering industrialization, we have mastered the art of survival through levies. The people are taxed when they send money home, when they speak, when they travel, and when they die.

And yet, with all these taxes, public infrastructure is crumbling, hospitals lack basic supplies, and industries are shutting down.

If Ghana truly wants to build a resilient economy, it must rethink everything from its visa policies to its tax structures. Opening up the country to African and diasporan investors, reducing arbitrary fees, and encouraging the free movement of people and goods would stimulate growth more effectively than any IMF loan. A strong economy is not built by restricting entry or punishing success. It is built by empowering citizens and rewarding productivity.

And finally, instead of singing choruses about how much gold Gold4Good or any other government initiative was able to accumulate in eight months of existence from small-scale miners, let us chant choruses about the number of homegrown gold refineries, mineral cutting centers, and gold assaying facilities Ghana has built.

Let us measure progress not by the amount of raw gold exported, but by the value we add before it leaves our soil. And let us bear in mind that even the tiny state of Massachusetts, with no gold at all, has built lasting and enduring prosperity for its citizens by investing in human capital and penetrating deeper than any geology or gold mine can ever reach.

DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.

DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.

There is no pressure on me from Mahama to cut any deals with NPP appointees – AG clarifies

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Dr Dominic Akuritinga Ayine is the Attorney General and Minister of Justice Dr Dominic Akuritinga Ayine is the Attorney General and Minister of Justice

The Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Dr Dominic Akuritinga Ayine, has debunked claims that he is under pressure to enter into plea deals with former government appointees who are under investigation for corruption-related activities.

He said this at the Government Accountability Series in Accra on Wednesday, October 22, 2025.

Dr Ayine disclosed that although some of the accused persons, including the Ashanti Regional Chairman of the New Patriotic Party (NPP), Bernard Antwi-Boasiako, popularly known as Chairman Wontumi, have made plea bargain offers, he has in no way been influenced by any individual or authority, specifically President John Dramani Mahama, to accept any offer in the discharge of his duties.

“I’m under no pressure from any quarters to cut deals. Mr President, who is my boss, has not put any pressure on me. He gives me his blessings when I brief him. The Chief of Staff has not put pressure on me to cut deals with anybody.

“Offers have been made, but I have turned all of them down. I have told everybody, please go to court. In the Wontumi case, offers were made to us for a plea bargain, but I said no, I’m filing charges. If you want to announce your intention for a plea deal, do it before the judge. That is now my strategy,” he explained.

Dr Dominic Ayine also shut down claims that he was negotiating plea deals with some NPP officials, describing such reports as false and politically motivated.

“The NPP took advantage and said I was cutting deals. No deals have been cut, and no deal will be cut,” he maintained.

Chairman Wontumi, the first accused in a case involving Akonta Mining Company Limited, is facing charges of engaging in unlicensed mining operations and assigning mineral rights without ministerial approval.

FULL TEXT: Attorney General briefs media on alleged criminal activities at Buffer Stock Company

He has pleaded not guilty to all charges.

He has since been granted bail in two separate rulings by different High Courts in Accra.

In the first instance, Justice Audrey Kocuvie-Tay granted him bail in the sum of GH¢15 million with three sureties, two of whom are required to justify with landed property within the court’s jurisdiction.

In a separate ruling, Justice Ruby Aryeetey granted bail to Wontumi and Edward Akuoko, the Operations Manager of Akonta Mining Company Limited, in the amount of GH¢10 million each, with two sureties, one of whom must justify with property.

Chairman Wontumi has since met the bail conditions and has been released from custody as proceedings continue in both cases related to Akonta Mining Company Limited.

ID/AE

Former Buffer Stock CEO Abdul-Wahab laundered and transferred over GHS40m

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The Attorney General and Minister for Justice, Dr. Dominic Ayine, has unveiled another layer of financial wrongdoing involving the former Chief Executive Officer of the National Food and Buffer Stock Company, Abdul-Wahab Hannan.

The latest revelations form part of the Government Accountability Series spearheaded by the Presidency Communications.

Dr. Ayine disclosed that investigations have uncovered a complex scheme of money laundering involving suspicious transfers totaling over GHS 40.5 million through Sawtina Enterprise, a company linked to the former CEO.

According to the Attorney General, the illicit transfers were made to various individuals and entities, raising serious concerns about financial impropriety, abuse of office, and attempts to conceal the origins of criminal proceeds.

The breakdown of the transfers is as follows:

* GHS 16,179,137.25 from Sawtina Enterprise to Hanan Abdul-Wahab
* GHS 23,913,964.90 from Sawtina Enterprise to Alqarni Enterprise
* GHS 500,000.00 from Sawtina Enterprise to Fa-Hausa Ventures
* GHS 550,000.00 from Sawtina Enterprise to Chain Homes Ghana Ltd

Read also

Full list of properties allegedly acquired by ex-Buffer Stock boss with stolen funds

 

Amber Luke Starts Tattoo Removal Process After Spending £193,000 on Her Full-Body Ink Makeover

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Australian model and social media star Amber Luke, widely known as the “Dragon Girl” for her extreme body modifications, has opened up about beginning the challenging process of tattoo removal after investing nearly £193,000 in her full-body transformation.

At 29 years old, Amber became a global sensation for her striking appearance, which featured tattoos covering nearly every inch of her skin, blue-inked eyeballs, a split tongue, and numerous piercings. Now, however, she says she is ready to embrace a more natural version of herself.

“I’ve realized that I went too far,” she admitted. “I want to rediscover the real me beneath all the ink.”

Amber, who got her first tattoo at 16, once viewed her body art as a form of empowerment and self-expression. But over time, she says her outlook has evolved. “The tattoos don’t define me anymore. I’m growing as a person, and that means letting go of some parts of my past,” she explained.

The process of tattoo removal has proven grueling physically and financially. Amber revealed that each laser session is “far more painful than getting tattooed” and can take hours, with multiple treatments required to fade the ink. Still, she’s determined to follow through. “It’s painful, but it’s worth it,” she said confidently.

Her decision has sparked mixed reactions online while some fans praise her for her honesty and courage, others say they’ll miss her iconic look that made her stand out in the modeling world.

For Amber, though, this is not about regret, but renewal. “I’m not erasing my past,” she said. “I’m simply turning the page and writing a new chapter of my life.”

As reported by punch

EOCO seizes $1.6m mansion, 17-bedroom hotel and other assets of ex-Buffer Stock CEO

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EOCO has confiscated luxury assets, including mansions, vehicles, and designer items, belonging to former NAFCO CEO Hanan Abdul-Wahab and his wife after uncovering a GH¢78 million embezzlement scheme.

The Economic and Organised Crime Office (EOCO) has confiscated several high-end properties, vehicles, and luxury items belonging to former National Food Buffer Stock Company (NAFCO) Chief Executive Officer, Hanan Abdul-Wahab, and his wife, Faiza Seidu Wuni, after uncovering what authorities describe as a sophisticated GH¢78 million embezzlement and money laundering operation.

Mahama says Ghana Infrastructure Plan to ensure project continuity and efficient

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President John Dramani Mahama has assured Ghanaians that the newly launched Ghana Infrastructure Plan (GIP) will put an end to the long-standing problem of abandoned projects by ensuring continuity across different governments.

Speaking at the launch of the Ghana Infrastructure Plan(GIP) in Accra, President Mahama said the initiative is designed to promote efficiency, accountability, and better use of public resources.

He explained that the GIP will be backed by Parliamentary approval, making it a national framework that transcends political transitions.

“The next step is to develop multi-sectoral linkages to ensure that infrastructure supports agriculture, industry, education, and health,” the President said.

“We also want to develop legal and institutional reforms that enhance continuity across governments, ending the cycle of project abandonment.”

President Mahama noted that successive governments have often refused to complete projects started by their predecessors, leading to waste and inefficiency. He gave an example from his recent visit to the Western Region, where he saw ongoing projects that had begun under the previous administration.

“Yesterday I went to the Western Region, and two of the projects I visited were projects that were advanced under the previous government. I want to assure the people of the Western Region that we are going to continue and finish these projects so that we can properly utilise taxpayers’ money.”

He added that the GIP will mark a shift from “scattered, politically motivated projects” to more coordinated, long-term investments aimed at job creation and national development.

“Our goal is straightforward, yet transformative to move from scattered, politically motivated projects to unified, long-term investments that generate jobs, unlock value, and foster prosperity,” he said.

President Mahama explained that the government’s Big Push Initiative will serve as the first phase of the Ghana Infrastructure Plan, focusing on completing abandoned and delayed projects in line with Article 35(7) of the 1992 Constitution.

Beyond ensuring project continuity, the President said the plan will also address the growing issue of rural-urban migration by promoting balanced regional development and equitable access to opportunities across the country.

“The Ghana Infrastructure Plan introduces special planning models that promote balanced regional development and equitable access to opportunities. You cannot progress as a nation when you have geographical imbalance in economic development.”

He criticised the past practice of changing development agencies with each new government, noting that this has weakened regional growth efforts.

“Setting up SADA as a special vehicle to accelerate development of the north was strategic,” he explained. “Unfortunately, a new government came, shut down SADA, and created three broad development authorities: Coastal, Middle Belt, and Northern, which really have done nothing, absolutely no impact.”

President Mahama said that the imbalance in development has forced many young people from the northern parts of the country to migrate to Accra and other southern cities in search of jobs.

“Every child finishing senior high school in the north, after a certain point, has no economic opportunities, no employment opportunities, so everybody is headed towards Accra.”

All foreign direct investment is coming into Accra. Incentives that have been given to rebalance development have not been very effective. And we must find a way of making them more effective, and that’s why we are suggesting an agro-industrial park in the northern part of the country,” the President added.

DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.

DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.

I deserve a diplomatic passport too

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King Ayisoba is a Ghanaian musician King Ayisoba is a Ghanaian musician

With five Ghanaian creatives honoured with diplomatic passports for their contributions to promoting Ghana abroad, veteran traditional musician King Ayisoba believes he also deserves the same recognition.

In an interview with broadcaster Kafui Dey, the “I Want To See My Father” hitmaker mentioned that his long-standing commitment to promoting Ghana’s traditional music should also earn him a place among those recognised.

The traditional musician, however, noted that he holds no grudges against those who received the diplomatic passports, acknowledging that they have all made Ghana proud in their respective fields.

‘Music didn’t make me rich, it made me comfortable’ – Gyedu-Blay Ambolley

He singled out Grammy-nominated reggae artiste Rocky Dawuni for praise, describing him as someone who has worked hard to elevate Ghana’s name globally.

“For me, I can’t say those who have received it don’t deserve it. Someone like Rocky Dawuni has really worked hard, it’s not easy to earn a Grammy nomination. I just hope they also consider me because, truthfully, when it comes to Ghanaian music traditions, I’m one of those who’ve carried it,” King Ayisoba said.

The Minister of Foreign Affairs, Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, presented diplomatic passports to five Ghanaian creatives, travel vlogger Wode Maya, reggae artiste Rocky Dawuni, broadcaster Anita Erskine, visual artist Ibrahim Mahama, and entrepreneur Dentaa Amoateng.

The ceremony took place on September 17, 2025, during the launch of the Diaspora Summit 2025, jointly organised by the Office of the President, Diaspora Affairs and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

According to the ministry, the five recipients were selected for their proven track record of promoting Ghana and African culture internationally.

Meanwhile, catch this week’s episode of Nkommo Wo Ho, packed with showbiz gist and street buzz here!

AK/EB

See full list of properties allegedly acquired by former NAFCO CEO

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Former NAFCO CEO, Abdul-Wahab Hanan is at the centre of fresh corruption related matters Former NAFCO CEO, Abdul-Wahab Hanan is at the centre of fresh corruption related matters

The Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Dr Dominic Akuritinga Ayine, has disclosed that the former Chief Executive Officer of the National Food and Buffer Stock Company (NAFCO), Abdul-Wahab Hanan, is at the centre of a major corruption investigation involving the alleged acquisition of high-value assets with state funds.

LIVESTREAMED: Attorney General provides new updates on ORAL cases

Speaking at the Government Accountability Series in Accra on Wednesday, October 22, 2025, Dr Ayine said investigators from the Economic and Organised Crime Office (EOCO) have traced several luxury properties and suspicious bank transactions linked to Abdul-Wahab, believed to have been financed with proceeds of crime.

“Investigators from the Economic and Organised Crime Office (EOCO) have traced several properties and bank transactions linked to Abdul-Wahab, which they believe were funded through illicit means,” he said.

The former NAFCO boss was arrested with his wife on June 25, 2025, and detained by EOCO for two weeks before being granted bail in the sum of GH¢60 million with two sureties.

His wife was released earlier on a GH¢30 million bail.

While the opposition New Patriotic Party (NPP) has criticised the bail conditions as excessively harsh and politically motivated, Dr Ayine maintained that the government remains committed to enforcing accountability and the rule of law.

He disclosed that assets allegedly acquired with misappropriated funds include a five-bedroom house at Chain Homes, valued at $1.625 million; a three-bedroom residence at Cantonments purchased for $600,000; plots of land at Airport Development Area worth $750,000; a 17-bedroom boutique hotel in Gumani, Tamale valued at $250,000; a four-bedroom bungalow at Dzorwulu valued at GH¢4.14 million; and a 0.32-acre parcel of government land purchased for GH¢307,200.

Dr Ayine assured that all assets proven to have been purchased with stolen funds will be confiscated in line with the law.

See the list below



MRA/AE

How former Buffer Stock CEO laundered and transferred over GH¢40m

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The Attorney General and Minister for Justice, Dr Dominic Ayine, has revealed fresh details of financial wrongdoing involving the former Chief Executive Officer of the National Food and Buffer Stock Company (NAFCo), Abdul-Wahab Hanan.

The new revelations were made during the Government Accountability Series on October 22, 2025.

According to Dr Ayine, ongoing investigations have uncovered a complex money-laundering scheme involving suspicious financial transfers totaling more than GH¢40.5 million through Sawtina Enterprise, a company allegedly linked to the former CEO.

He noted that the findings point to a deliberate effort to conceal illicit financial transactions, adding that his office is working with relevant investigative bodies to ensure full accountability and possible prosecution of all those implicated.

From GH¢548 Million to GH¢2.2 Billion: NSS payroll scandal deepens after forensic audit

Read the Attorney-General’s full presentation below:

My Fellow countrymen and women

I am here this morning to account to the sovereign people of Ghana as has been my practice since assuming office as Attorney General. Today, I will do two things. Firstly, I will provide update on the ORAL investigations we have been conducting and the ORAL-related prosecutions that have been filed so far.

Second, you would recall that on March 20, 2025, when I announced the Kwabena Adu-Boahene investigation, I referred to an ongoing investigation as the “Rumble in the Jungle”.

The reference was to the Buffer Stock criminal investigation. I will this morning announce the conclusion of investigations into the elaborate criminal enterprise that started in 2018 after the appointment of Abdul-Wahab Hanan as chief executive officer.

As far as the ORAL investigations are concerned, the status report is as follows: Out of the Report of the ORAL Committee submitted to my office, we instructed the National Intelligence Bureau in March 2025 to conduct investigations into cases of suspected acts of theft and graft by public officials and their allies in the private sector.

The investigations were necessary because the ORAL Committee Reports did not contain the evidence required to prove the guilt of the suspects in court beyond reasonable doubt. It is always important to remember that the ORAL Committee was tasked by His Excellency the President to receive complaints of looting of state resources.

Our investigators have diligently concluded investigations in the following cases-

• Skytrain

• National Service Ghost Names Scandal

• District Road Improvement Project (DRIP)

• National Lotteries

• Pwalugu Multipurpose Dam

SML

• Frontier Health Care Services

• Free Wifi

• National Ambulance

• Boankra Integrated Inland Logistics Terminal

• Sputnik V Vaccines Case

• Land looting- 8 instances investigated

Prosecutions have commenced in the Skytrain and National Service scandals. In the case of the latter, we have filed charges against the former Executive Director, Osei Assibey Antwi and his deputy, Gifty Oware. Charges are being prepared against the rest of the public officers and the so-called marketplace vendors.

In all, we intend to file about 10 cases in the NSA scandal and will use some of the public officers and vendors as prosecution witnesses. Also, I wish to announce that the Auditor General has conducted a forensic audit into the NSA scandal and the total amount of money stolen or illegally spent now stands at GH¢2 billion and not the GH¢548 million that was uncovered by our investigators as at June 2025.

Investigations are still ongoing in respect of the following matters-

• All African Games

• Mathematical Sets

• Bank of Ghana Building

• Stadia Renovation

• National Cathedral

Ladies and Gentlemen:

Rumble in the Jungle

Now to the Buffer Stock investigations which I nicknamed “The Rumble in the Jungle.” As of March 20, 2025, when we announced the arrest and detention of suspects Kwabena Adu Boahene and his wife Angela Boateng, the Economic and Organized Crime Office had gathered credible intelligence regarding a criminal enterprise that had been operated by the former Chief Executive Officer of the National Food and Buffer Stock Company Limited, Abdul-Wahab Hanan.

Initial estimates put the amount of money pilfered by Mr. Abdul-Wahab and his collaborators at the time at around Fifty-Eight Million Ghana Cedis (GH¢58,000,000.00), far in excess of the Forty-Nine Million Ghana Cedis (GH¢49,000,000.00) suspected to have been stolen by Mr. Kwabena Adu Boahene and his co-accused persons.

I called the criminal enterprise operated by Mr. Abdul-Wahab and his collaborators at the Buffer Stock “the Rumble in the Jungle” not only because of the huge amount of money at stake but because of the fact that, while food suppliers were wailing and gnashing their teeth due to failure to pay them for supplies to the Buffer Stock, and while our school kids were being denied nutrition under the School Feeding Program for lack of funds, Mr. Abdul-Wahab and his collaborators were busy lawlessly looting funds meant for the Program. That is jungle behavior.

The informal meaning of the word “rumble” is to discover an illicit activity or its perpetrator. Through painstaking investigations, the EOCO discovered this illicit, criminal enterprise run by a gang of corrupt, lawless officials at the Buffer Stock Company.

Summary of the Findings

On June 25, 2025, the EOCO conducted a coordinated operation based upon their initial investigations which resulted in the arrest of Mr. Abdul-Wahab, former Cehief Executive of the National Food And Buffer Stock Company (NAFCO), his wife Faiza Seidu Wuni and James Atieku, the Buffer Stock manager for the Northern Sector who was based in Tamale. The operation also led to the arrest of Emmanuel Arthur, Head of Corporate Affairs of NAFCO.

The arrest followed Initial intelligence and assessment by EOCO which suggested that while serving as CEO of Buffer Stock between 2017 and 2024, Mr. Abdul-Wahab Hanan colluded with his wife, Faiza Seidu Wuni, Richard Sam Asante (Head of Finance), Bismark Owusu Boakye (Finance Department), and Emmanuel Arthur (Corporate Affairs Manager) and others to, to create an elaborate criminal enterprise that was used to steal and launder public funds from the Buffer Stock Company.

Within the period between 2017 and 2024, Hanan Abdul-Wahab, in concert with Richard Sam-Asante and Bismark Owusu Bokaye, orchestrated the transfer of Seventy-Eight Million Two Hundred And Sixty Nine Thousand, Eighty Four and Four Pesewas and Four Ghana Cedis (GH¢78,269,084.04) from the bank accounts of Buffer Stock Company to a private company linked to Hanan Abdul-Wahab, his wife and staff of buffer stock Company at Republic Bank and ECOBANK.

Evidence shows that the funds were instantly retransferred to companies owned by Hanan Abdul-Wahab himself and companies and entities owned and associated with and Hanan and his wife . Similarly Evidence show that between December 2017 and May 2019, Hanan Abdul-Wahab transferred Five Million, Four Hundred And Ninety Five thousand, Seven And Forty Eight Ghana Cedis and Thirty Six Pesewas (GH¢5,495,748.36 ) from Buffer Stock accounts to two bank accounts belonging to Aludiba Enterprise at Republic Bank and ABSA, a company he owns.

Aludiba Enterprise is not a registered supplier of Buffer Stock Company. Hanan Abdul-Whab between October 2019 to January 2022 also orchestrated some suppliers to transfer an amount of Eleven Million Nine Hundred And Ninety Eight thousand Ghana Cedis and fourty Eight pesewas (GH¢11,998,830.48) to an entity owned by a staff of buffer stock and later instructed the staff to re-transfer the funds to a company owned and run by Hanan Abdul Wahab and his wife.

In July 2022, investigations found that Hanan Abdul Wahab transferred GH¢251,050 from Buffer Stock Accounts to a bank account at Republic Bank belonging to Energy Partners Ltd, a company co-owned by the Hanan Abdul Wahab and Emmanuel Arthur, the Head of Corporate Affairs of Buffer Stock company.

Energy Partners is not a service provider for Buffer stock. The evidence gathered so far shows that they run this criminal enterprise under the pretext of supplying food items to schools under the School Feeding Program.

Seven entities linked to Mr. Hanan Abdul-Wahab and his wife were used as vehicles to receive and to launder the proceeds of crime from Buffer Stock. The money laundering took the form of property acquisitions across the country, including real estate and luxury goods using the same entities.

The entities in question are as follows:

• Alqarni Enterprise

• Aludiba Enterprise

• Energy Partners Limited

• Fa-Hausa Ventures

• Fa-Hausa Company Limited and

• Aludiba Foundation and

• Sawtina Enterprise (owned by a third party connected to the couple)

Bank documents obtained by the EOCO reveal that within the period that the suspects operated the criminal enterprise, Mr. Hanan Abdul-Wahab, his wife and their entities became the largest depositors of Republic Bank.

Investigations established that in 2018, Sawtina Enterprise, an entity owned by James Atieku-Apawu applied to become a licensed supplier to the Buffer Stock Company. This application was approved by his boss, Hanan Abdul-Wahab, knowing very well that his approval placed James Tieku-Apawu in a conflict-of-interest situation.

Documentary evidence from bank accounts of Buffer Stock revealed that between September 2018 and June 2024 Buffer Stock transferred a total of GH¢78,269,082.04 to Sawtina Enterprise’s bank accounts at Ecobank and Republic Bank respectively. The payments were supposedly to pay for food supplies made by Sawtina Enterprise to schools under the School Feeding Program (SFP).

Verified records, including waybills and store receipt vouchers (SRVs) from Buffer Stock, indicated that only GH¢27,389,872.00 out of payments to Sawtina Enterprise were backed by supplies. There is no evidence that the remaining GH¢50,879,210.04 paid to the enterprise was backed by food supplies or any service rendered to Buffer Stock.

A review of Sawtina Enterprise’s bank account revealed that the bulk of the payments which Buffer Stock made to Sawtina Enterprise’s bank accounts (about 98%) of the GH¢78,269,082.04 were instantly re-transferred to Alqarni Enterprise, Fa-Hausa Ventures and other entities owned and controlled by or affiliated to Hanan Abdul-Wahab and Faiza Seidu Wuni.

Under interrogation, Mr. Atieku-Apawu stated that, although some of the funds received into Sawtina’s Ecobank and Republic Bank accounts were for the few genuine supplies backed by waybills and Store Receipt Vouchers (SRV’s), in most instances no supplies were made but he noticed that Buffer Stock kept making payments to his company, Sawtina Enterprise.

He also admitted that other third-party companies which our investigations have established to be Licensed Buying Companies (LBC’s) or suppliers to Buffer Stock also made several payments into Sawtina’s account. He said he neither knew the promoters of these companies nor did his company have any business dealings with them.

He had no explanation as to why the millions were transferred into his company’s bank account but observed that those payments, whether from Buffer Stock or from third parties, were made into Sawtina’s account on the instruction of his then boss Hanan Abdul-Wahab.

He further explained that whenever such payments were deposited into Sawtina’s account, he was prompted by Hanan to expect the transfer and was later instructed on where to move or re-transfer the funds. In effect, Sawtina became a conduit for Hanan Abdul-Wahab and his wife to steal Buffer Stock funds without easy detection.

Transaction analysis of Sawtina Enterprise’s Republic bank account and entities used as vehicles to launder the proceeds of the criminal enterprise established by Hanan and his Wife Faiza corroborated the claims made by Mr. James Tieku-Apawu. For example, a review of some of the re-transfers of the funds paid to Sawtina Enterprise by Buffer Stock revealed the following:

As is typical of all investigations conducted by the EOCO, contemporaneous tracing of the proceeds of crime has been undertaken and can confirm that the couple purchased a number of high-end real estate properties from their ill-gotten wealth. The properties are as follows:

Five-bedroom house bought from Chain Homes Limited between February 2019 and December 2020 at a cost of $1,625,000. Of this amount, GH¢5,758,165.00 (equivalent to $230,841.00) was paid directly from the accounts of the investigated entities. The balance was paid in cash to Chain Homes by the couple;

In July 2020, the couple purchased a 3-bedrom house at Cantonments from Golden Coast Developer Ltd at a cost of $600,000.00 using two of their companies- Fa-Hausa Ventures (owned by the wife) and Fa-Hausa Company Limited (owned jointly by the couple). The land documents are registered in the name of the wife;

Between October 2019 and February 2021, the couple purchased plots at Finali’s Airport development site for USD $750,000.00. The total payments were made in cash in the name of Faiza Seidu Wuni.

Subsequently, in July 2021, Faiza Seidu Wuni signed a contract with a construction company, Mendanha and Sousa Construction Ltd at a cost of USD$691,650.00 to construct the shell and core of the building.

This excludes the cost of architectural designs from Ansara Architecture Pty Ltd based in South Africa. The building sitting on three plots is now estimated to be valued at about USD$2,5000,000.00.

The couple purchased 0.32-acre government land from one Anthony Duke Essien, a known government land sales agent named in both the demolition of the Nigerian High Commission and the Sale and demolition of the Bulgarian Consulate.

Duke Essian used his sister Antoinette Tsiboe Darko, a staff of Danquah Institute as a front, to purchase from the Ministry of Lands and the Land Commission at a price of GH¢307,200. Duke Essien then instantly sold the land to Hanan Abdul-Wahab and received about GH¢2,567,000.00. The payment came from the criminal proceeds from Buffer Stock through Sawtina Enterprise through Alqarni Enterprise and Hanan himself to Anthony Duke Essien.

On the instruction of his brother, Duke Essien, Antoinette then wrote to the Land Commission in March 2020 to instruct them that the lease should be in the name of Hanan Abdul-Wahab. In May 2020, she made a U-turn and wrote to the Lands Commission to withdraw the documents bearing the name of Hanan Abdul-Wahab and now replace it with his wife Faiza Seidu Wuni. The couple developed four units of 4-bedroom apartments on the said land. Property is yet to be valued.

Other properties acquired by the couple are as follows:

17-bedroom boutique hotel at Gumani in Tamale in respect of which the couple used Fa-Hausa Company Limited to sign a franchise with Villa Monticello for $250,000.00 in order to hide the hotel under the brand name of villa monticello.

4-bedroom bungalow situated at Dworwulu, Accra valued at GH¢4,142,451.00.

Three storey building (Chicken Republic) situate at Estate Junction, Tamale;

• Five-bedroom mansion at Kanvili, Dorado Street, Tamale

• Three bedroom house, Kpalsi, Tamale

• One storey building, No. 10 Selby Gardens, Achimota, Accra

• 27 acre plot of land, Estate Junction, Tamale

• 29 acre land, Close to Workers College, Tamale

We have frozen all these assets and will be taking steps to have them confiscated to the state in the course of the criminal proceedings. Also, in terms of liquid assets, we have frozen a fixed deposit account belonging to Mr. Hannan containing GH¢10,000,000.00 with Republic Bank, Labone Branch, Accra. Additionally we have also frozen several vehicles and over 61 luxury handbags

Ladies and Gentlemen:

On account of the foregoing, we have decided to charge Mr. Hanan Abdul-Wahab and his wife, Faiza Seidu Wuni with stealing, conspiracy to steal, wilfully causing financial loss to the state, using public office for profit, obtaining public property by false statements and money laundering. The charges will be filed on Friday, October 24, 2025.

Thank you for your attention.

MA

Rival fans mock Kotoko as Hakim Ziyech joins Wydad ahead of return leg

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Hakim Ziyech has joined Wydad AC Hakim Ziyech has joined Wydad AC

Social media has gone wild following confirmation that Moroccan star Hakim Ziyech has joined Wydad AC, with Ghanaian fans quickly turning the announcement into fresh banter at the expense of Asante Kotoko.

The former Chelsea and Ajax winger sealed a sensational one-year deal with the Casablanca giants as a free agent, returning home for what many are calling a “fairytale homecoming.”

But in Ghana, the news has sparked waves of trolling, mainly because Kotoko are set to face Wydad in the CAF Confederation Cup second preliminary round.

Wydad edged Kotoko 1-0 in Accra on October 19, 2025, and the return leg in Morocco is scheduled for Friday, October 24, 2025.

Watch highlights of Asante Kotoko’s 1-0 defeat to Wydad Casablanca

With Ziyech’s arrival, rival fans have been quick to joke that the Porcupine Warriors are “finished.”

Though it’s unclear if Ziyech will feature in the second leg, Fabrizio Romano confirmed the transfer with his signature “Here We Go!” post.

Read some of the comments below:

FKA/JE

Meanwhile, watch the latest Sports Check interview with Alex Kotey, the GFA Referees Manager below:

Auditor General’s forensic audit reveals Gh¢2.2B, not Gh¢548M, stolen in NSA scandal – AG

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Gifty Oware-Mensah

The Attorney General and Minister for Justice, Dr Dominic Ayine, has revealed that a forensic audit conducted by the Office of the Auditor General into the National Service Authority (NSA) scandal has uncovered a total loss of Gh¢2.2 billion, contrary to the earlier estimate of Gh¢548 million.

According to Dr Ayine, the new findings have prompted his office to amend the charge sheet to reflect the updated figures and include new charges against the accused persons.

Speaking during the Government Accountability Series on Wednesday, October 22, Dr Ayine confirmed that charges have already been filed against the former Director-General of the NSA, Osei Assibey Antwi, and his deputy, Gifty Oware-Mensah. He added that more prosecutions are expected to follow as part of the government’s broader anti-corruption drive.

2025-08-18T17:06:11+00:00


2025-08-29T15:34:35+00:00


2025-09-05T13:29:31+00:00



Charges are being prepared against the rest of the public officers and the so-called marketplace vendors. In all, we intend to file about 10 cases in the NSA scandal and we will use some of the public officers and vendors as prosecution witnesses. This strategy is working well for us, and we intend to continue using it.

He further disclosed that the forensic audit had significantly expanded the scope of the investigation.


The Auditor General has conducted a forensic audit into the NSA scandal, and the total amount of money stolen or illegally spent now stands at Gh¢2.2 billion, not the Gh¢548 million uncovered by my investigators as of June 2025.

Dr Ayine also noted that investigations remain ongoing into several other high-profile cases, including the All-Africa Games, the mathematical sets procurement, the Bank of Ghana’s new building project, stadium renovations, and the National Cathedral. In the case of the National Cathedral, he confirmed that his office has requested another forensic audit to ensure full transparency and accountability.

Integrate 24-Hour Economy Into NDPC Framework – CPS

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From R-L; Dr. Adu Owusu Sarkodie with officials of Centre for Policy Scrutiny (CPS)

 

The Centre for Policy Scrutiny (CPS), has urged the government to integrate the 24-Hour Economy programme into the country’s medium term development framework of the National Development Planning Commission (NDPC).

Executive Director at the Centre, Dr. Adu-Owusu Sarkodie, made the call during a review by the Policy Think Tank on the government’s 24 Hour –Economy flagship programme in Accra yesterday.

He pointed out that integrating 24-Hour Economy programmes into the National Development Planning Commission’s long term programme will not only ensure alignment with national priorities but also help eliminate duplication.

According to him,   the 24-Hour policy reflects the government needs to fill the pressing need for a stronger, more diversified economy, aligning with the country’s pursuit for long term transformation.

Dr. Sarkodie, however, stated that the success of the programme will not only depend on its vision but also on coherence and efficiency to reduce implementation and fiscal risk.

He also called on the government to establish transparent costing and phased fiscal planning to enhance the credibility for effective implementation of the progamme providing cost estimates based on impact and feasibility.

According to the think tank, such transparency will support budget discipline, improve stakeholder confidence, reduce the risk of overextension in a constrained fiscal environment.

He mentioned that the Centre observed that  the 24 Hour programme  correctly diagnosed Ghana’s development  challenges and prescribes solutions  similar to  previous development ambitions and strategies contrary to  earlier interpretations centred on adopting  a three-shift employment  system across the public and private sectors.

“None of the programmes suggested outcome indicators relates to shift work, whether projected rate of adoption or its projected prevalence in the economy by some future date,” he noted

“While the term 24-Hour economy may suggest round the clock –operations, the programme represents a broader national transformation agenda. The shift system may be one of the strategies employed but it is neither a perquisite nor a defining feature of economic transformation” the Centre observed.

The event which brought together some executives of the 24-Hour Economy Secretariat, members of the academia, members of the diplomatic corps, students as well as several other dignitaries assessed the strategic coherence, fiscal credibility and feasibility of the 24 Hour Economy programme.

 

By Ebenezer K. Amponsah

EPA To Train Journalists On Climate Communication

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Prof. Nana Ama Klutse addressing the press

 

The Environmental Protection Authority (EPA) is partnering with Knutsford University to train journalists, skilled communicators, corporate actors, and educators on climate and environmental issues in Ghana—an effort aimed at bridging the gap between knowledge and action.

This partnership resulted in the launch of the National Climate and Environmental Communication Initiative (NCECI), which will strengthen the capacity of media professionals and communicators to report on environmental and climate issues accurately and creatively.

The initiative will also support corporate sustainability communications and ESG reporting, promoting transparency and accountability. It will also engage youth and communities through the Action for Climate Empowerment (ACE) framework, and foster collaboration among government, academia, the private sector, as well as development partners to promote a united national response.

Speaking at the event, EPA CEO, Prof. Nana Ama Klutse, said that across the world, climate change continues to threaten lives, livelihoods, and ecosystems.

She stated that too often, climate information stays confined to technical reports and policy circles, emphasising that the communication gap will be bridged with the launch of NCECI.

Prof. Klutse said NCECI positions Ghana to tell its own story—one of resilience, innovation, and leadership in a language that people, partners, and the world can understand.

“As we approach COP30, this initiative ensures that our national voice is clear, unified, and grounded in public understanding and participation. Because a well-informed nation is a stronger negotiating nation,” she stated.

She further added that, “We are proud to have Knutsford University as our academic anchor and look forward to a strong collaboration with the Ghana Journalists Association.

“The Media Foundation for West Africa, corporate networks, and development partners. Together, we can make climate communication not an occasional campaign, but a sustained national movement.”

Pro-Chancellor of Knustford University, Bishop John Kwabena, expressed the university’s willingness to execute the initiative to the benefit of the country.

He said, “We are happy to be working with communicators and journalists. Almost every year until quite recently, we have given training free of charge to journalists of all walks of life. To give them basic education or knowledge in management, in leadership, in communication, all the essentials that they need to do their work well.”

 

BY Prince Fiifi Yorke

GTEC Releases List Of Unaccredited Tertiary Institutions

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The Ghana Tertiary Education Commission (GTEC) has released a list of 50 tertiary institutions considered unrecognised by the Commission.

According to GTEC, the United States has 24 institutions listed as unaccredited, which is the highest number. Ghana follows with five, and India with four unaccredited institutions.

Other countries with institutions on the list include Italy, Costa Rica, Germany, Nigeria, and the United Kingdom, among others.

The unaccredited institutions include Universidad Azteca in Mexico, Indian School of Management and Studies in India, Breyer State Theology University in USA, Debest College of Science, Arts and Business in Ghana, Osiri University in USA, Atlantic International University in USA, Faith University Seminary in Ghana, Christian University College in Monrovia Liberia, Rhema  Bible Training College in USA, Universidad Empresarial de Costa Rica in Costa Rica, Selinus University of Sciences and Literature in Italy.

Others include Crown University International Chartered in USA, Monarch Business School in Switzerland, City University in Cambodia, Kesmond International University in USA, Washington University of Barbados in Barbados, London Academy of Technology and Management in UK, IICSE University in USA,  Doxa Open University in Ghana, Brainae University in USA, University of Haana in Germany, Christian Leadership University in USA, International Institute of Church Management Inc in USA.

The rest are Electrical and Mechanical Engineering Training School in Ghana, Louisiana Baptist University & Seminary in USA, Tech Global University in Andorra, International Christian University in Nigeria, LIGS University, Hawaii in USA, Swiss Management Centre University in Switzerland, Quest International University in Ghana, Isles International University in Ireland, and Kingsnow University in USA.

Also, New Life Bible College and Seminary in USA, East Bridge University Paris in France, Taxila American University in Guyana, Vision International University in USA, Keisie International University in USA, Dublin Metropolitan University in UK/Cyprus, Logos University in USA, University of America in USA, Kazian School of Management in India, University of Northwest, Brooklyn in USA, Akamai University, Hawaii in USA, Trinity Graduate School of Apologetics and Theology (TGSAT) in India, American Bible University in USA, California Creek University in USA, Universidad Catolica De Murcia in Spain, Delta International University in USA, National Institute of Business Management (NIBM) in India, and Southern California International University in USA were listed as unaccredited institutions.

GTEC cautioned the public to verify the accreditation status of tertiary institutions before enrolling, stressing that qualifications obtained from unrecognised institutions would not be accepted for academic or professional purposes in Ghana.

 

By Florence Asamoah Adom

NSA ghost names scandal balloons to GHS2.2bn after forensic audit – AG

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The scale of financial losses in the ongoing National Service Authority (NSA) scandal is far greater than initially reported, according to the Attorney General and Minister for Justice, Dr. Dominic Ayine.

Speaking as part of the Government Accountability Series on Wednesday, Dr. Ayine revealed that a forensic audit conducted by the Auditor General has uncovered a total of GHS 2.2 billion in funds either stolen or illegally expended within the NSA.

This figure is a staggering jump from the GHS 548 million originally identified by investigators as of June 2025.

“Also, I wish to announce that the Auditor General has conducted a forensic audit into the NSA scandal, and the total amount of money stolen or illegally spent now stands at GHS 2.2 billion,” Dr. Ayine stated.

“This is significantly higher than the GHS 548 million that was uncovered by our investigators earlier this year.”

Meanwhile, former Deputy Executive Director of the National Service Authority (NSA), Gifty Oware Mensah, who has been implicated in the scandal has pleaded not guilty to charges of causing financial loss of more than GH¢38 million to the state.

Mrs. Oware Mensah appeared before the Accra High Court on Wednesday, October 22, 2025, where she was formally charged with five counts—including willfully causing financial loss to the state, stealing, money laundering, and using public office for profit.

Prosecutors allege that during her tenure, the accused generated approximately 9,934 non-existent National Service personnel, and unlawfully profited from the monthly allowances disbursed under those ghost names.

The alleged infractions are said to have resulted in financial losses amounting to more than GH¢38 million to the government.

Mahama Ayariga outlines major interventions by Government since January

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The Majority Leader in Parliament, Mahama Ayariga, has outlined key interventions introduced by the government since January to improve the economy, create jobs, and strengthen essential public services.

Speaking during the opening of the third meeting of the first session of the ninth Parliament, Mr. Ayariga explained that the government’s policies were beginning to yield results across various sectors, particularly in energy, education, health, and local development.

He noted that the economy was rebounding, inflation had dropped to single digits, and the cedi was showing stability.

According to him, these improvements were the result of prudent spending and better debt management, which had restored confidence in the financial system.

The Majority Leader mentioned that the government had paid over 2.8 billion cedis in National Health Insurance claims, clearing arrears that had long affected healthcare providers.

He added that an additional 3.4 billion cedis had been released to the National Health Insurance Authority after the decoupling of the National Health Reserve Levy, ensuring reliable funding for new initiatives such as Free Primary Health Care and Mahama Cares.

He indicated that the government expected active membership of the National Health Insurance Scheme to reach 20 million by the end of the year.

On education, Mr. Ayariga explained that schools were running smoothly under the Free Senior High School policy and that the academic calendar had not been disrupted.

He assured that the government would continue to invest in education and skills development to support the youth.

He also pointed to progress in local governance, noting that district assemblies had received timely Common Fund allocations, which were boosting local economies and creating jobs.

The Majority leader highlighted ongoing road construction and other infrastructure projects as part of the government’s broader plan to improve living conditions and drive growth.

He commended the Speaker and staff of Parliament for maintaining professionalism and openness, adding that Ghana’s Parliament had once again been ranked the most open on the continent by the Africa Open Parliament Index.

Mr. Ayariga reaffirmed the government’s commitment to accountability and inclusive growth, stressing that the administration of President John Dramani Mahama would continue to focus on policies that make life better for ordinary Ghanaians.

By: Jacob Aggrey

Ghana and Barbados Set to Boost Travel Opportunities Starting From This November

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Published on
October 22, 2025

In a momentous move for international travel, Ghana and Barbados will officially inaugurate a direct flight route in November 2025. This significant milestone is a direct outcome of the GUBA Awards and Trade Conference 2025. The inaugural flight marks the beginning of a new chapter in air travel between West Africa and the Caribbean, offering both tourism and trade opportunities that promise to benefit the people and economies of both nations.

The route will reduce the travel time significantly, making it easier for both business professionals and leisure tourists to travel between the two destinations. The direct connection also paves the way for further tourism and trade developments, which are expected to have long-term positive effects on both countries.

Strengthening Bilateral Ties Through Aviation and Tourism

The launch of this direct flight route is a testament to the growing relationship between Ghana and Barbados, both of which are eager to strengthen their cultural and economic ties. The event served as the perfect catalyst for this historic achievement in aviation and tourism, helping lay the groundwork for the direct flight and increased travel options.

The new service will make it easier for tourists, business professionals, and members of the diaspora to travel between the two nations, bringing them closer together. Ghana is already an attractive destination for African-American tourists, and Barbados, with its vibrant Caribbean culture, offers a unique contrast. The cultural exchange between these two countries, through the new flight route, promises to benefit travelers by opening up more opportunities for exploration, business, and leisure. Travelers from both countries will find it easier to access their destinations, with reduced flight times and the convenience of a direct route.

Tourism and Trade Growth: The Benefits of the New Flight Route

One of the main benefits of this new route is the potential to grow tourism for both countries. Ghana, with its rich history, incredible landmarks, and lively music scene, is a growing tourism hub in West Africa. Barbados, known for its pristine beaches, historical sites, and warm weather, is a Caribbean gem that attracts millions of visitors each year. Now, the new direct flight will make it easier for travelers from both destinations to visit each other, allowing them to enjoy each country’s unique offerings.

In addition to tourism, the new flight will significantly benefit trade between the two nations. The airlines operating the route will be able to carry goods, services, and products between the two countries, further expanding commercial opportunities.

A New Era for International Travel: What to Expect from the Flight

As the November launch date approaches, both Ghana and Barbados are making final preparations for the new direct flight service. The new flight will be a welcome change for travelers who previously had to take connecting flights with long layovers, adding valuable hours to their journey.

For travelers, the experience promises to be smooth and enjoyable. The convenience of direct access between two fascinating destinations will enhance the travel experience, creating more opportunities for both adventure and business expansion. Both countries are eager to welcome international travelers, making this flight a gateway to new and exciting adventures.

Looking Forward to Stronger Connections and Shared Prosperity

As travelers from around the world prepare for this groundbreaking new flight route, the impact of the Ghana-Barbados direct flight is already being felt in both countries. Whether you’re looking to explore the cultural heritage of Ghana or relax on the idyllic beaches of Barbados, this new flight is the perfect way to experience the best of both worlds.

As the world opens up to more travel opportunities, the Ghana-Barbados direct flight promises to be just the beginning of deeper international ties and shared prosperity for both nations. Travelers eager to visit these vibrant destinations will no longer face the hurdles of long layovers and connecting flights, but will enjoy a seamless and efficient journey to their chosen destination.

Miniskirts, transparent dresses can get you arrested – Security analyst warns

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File photo of patrons at a party File photo of patrons at a party

Security analyst Samuel Nana Appiah Owusu has cautioned Ghanaians, particularly women, to be mindful of how they dress in public, warning that indecent dressing could lead to arrest under the same laws that govern indecent exposure.

Speaking on Neat FM on Monday, October 21, 2025, Owusu explained that Ghanaian law permits prosecution in cases where individuals expose private parts of their bodies or wear clothing deemed inappropriate in public spaces.

“You have to be mindful of the way you dress whenever you step out, especially if you are a lady. Your breasts should be properly covered, and your panties should cover the areas they are supposed to cover,” he stated.

He further warned against wearing transparent or overly revealing outfits, stressing that:

“If you go to a party and your skirt is so short that your panties are visible, you can also get into legal trouble.”

According to him, such appearances fall under indecent exposure, which is punishable by law and can lead to being reported, arrested, and prosecuted.

Owusu added that these laws are intended to preserve societal morals and protect individuals:

“Such rules exist to ensure the moral fabric of society remains intact. What you wear at home should be different from what you wear in public.”

He also argued that dressing modestly could help reduce incidents of sexual assault, claiming that:

“Some rape culprits often say they were provoked by what the victims wore.”

Watch the video below:

ID/

Attorney General briefs media on alleged criminal activities at Buffer Stock Company

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The Attorney General and Minister for Justice, Dr Dominic Ayine, has revealed fresh details of financial wrongdoing involving the former Chief Executive Officer of the National Food and Buffer Stock Company (NAFCo), Abdul-Wahab Hannan.

The new revelations were made during the Government Accountability Series on October 22, 2025.

According to Dr Ayine, ongoing investigations have uncovered a complex money-laundering scheme involving suspicious financial transfers totaling more than GH¢40.5 million through Sawtina Enterprise, a company allegedly linked to the former CEO.

He noted that the findings point to a deliberate effort to conceal illicit financial transactions, adding that his office is working with relevant investigative bodies to ensure full accountability and possible prosecution of all those implicated.

Read the Attorney-General’s full presentation below:

My Fellow countrymen and women

I am here this morning to account to the sovereign people of Ghana as has been my practice since assuming office as Attorney General. Today, I will do two things. Firstly, I will provide update on the ORAL investigations we have been conducting and the ORAL-related prosecutions that have been filed so far.

Second, you would recall that on March 20, 2025, when I announced the Kwabena Adu-Boahene investigation, I referred to an ongoing investigation as the “Rumble in the Jungle”.

The reference was to the Buffer Stock criminal investigation. I will this morning announce the conclusion of investigations into the elaborate criminal enterprise that started in 2018 after the appointment of Hannan Abdul-Wahab as chief executive officer.

As far as the ORAL investigations are concerned, the status report is as follows: Out of the Report of the ORAL Committee submitted to my office, we instructed the National Intelligence Bureau in March 2025 to conduct investigations into cases of suspected acts of theft and graft by public officials and their allies in the private sector.

The investigations were necessary because the ORAL Committee Reports did not contain the evidence required to prove the guilt of the suspects in court beyond reasonable doubt. It is always important to remember that the ORAL Committee was tasked by His Excellency the President to receive complaints of looting of state resources.

Our investigators have diligently concluded investigations in the following cases-

• Skytrain

• National Service Ghost Names Scandal

• District Road Improvement Project (DRIP)

• National Lotteries

• Pwalugu Multipurpose Dam

SML

• Frontier Health Care Services

• Free Wifi

• National Ambulance

• Boankra Integrated Inland Logistics Terminal

• Sputnik V Vaccines Case

• Land looting- 8 instances investigated

Prosecutions have commenced in the Skytrain and National Service scandals. In the case of the latter, we have filed charges against the former Executive Director, Osei Assibey Antwi and his deputy, Gifty Oware. Charges are being prepared against the rest of the public officers and the so-called marketplace vendors.

In all, we intend to file about 10 cases in the NSA scandal and will use some of the public officers and vendors as prosecution witnesses. Also, I wish to announce that the Auditor General has conducted a forensic audit into the NSA scandal and the total amount of money stolen or illegally spent now stands at GH¢2 billion and not the GH¢548 million that was uncovered by our investigators as at June 2025.

Investigations are still ongoing in respect of the following matters-

• All African Games

• Mathematical Sets

• Bank of Ghana Building

• Stadia Renovation

• National Cathedral

Ladies and Gentlemen:

Rumble in the Jungle

Now to the Buffer Stock investigations which I nicknamed “The Rumble in the Jungle.” As of March 20, 2025, when we announced the arrest and detention of suspects Kwabena Adu Boahene and his wife Angela Boateng, the Economic and Organized Crime Office had gathered credible intelligence regarding a criminal enterprise that had been operated by the former Chief Executive Officer of the National Food and Buffer Stock Company Limited, Mr. Hanan Abdul-Wahab.

Initial estimates put the amount of money pilfered by Mr. Abdul-Wahab and his collaborators at the time at around Fifty-Eight Million Ghana Cedis (GH¢58,000,000.00), far in excess of the Forty-Nine Million Ghana Cedis (GH¢49,000,000.00) suspected to have been stolen by Mr. Kwabena Adu Boahene and his co-accused persons.

I called the criminal enterprise operated by Mr. Abdul-Wahab and his collaborators at the Buffer Stock “the Rumble in the Jungle” not only because of the huge amount of money at stake but because of the fact that, while food suppliers were wailing and gnashing their teeth due to failure to pay them for supplies to the Buffer Stock, and while our school kids were being denied nutrition under the School Feeding Program for lack of funds, Mr. Abdul-Wahab and his collaborators were busy lawlessly looting funds meant for the Program. That is jungle behavior.

The informal meaning of the word “rumble” is to discover an illicit activity or its perpetrator. Through painstaking investigations, the EOCO discovered this illicit, criminal enterprise run by a gang of corrupt, lawless officials at the Buffer Stock Company.

Summary of the Findings

On June 25, 2025, the EOCO conducted a coordinated operation based upon their initial investigations which resulted in the arrest of Mr. Abdul-Wahab, former Cehief Executive of the National Food And Buffer Stock Company (NAFCO), his wife Faiza Seidu Wuni and James Atieku, the Buffer Stock manager for the Northern Sector who was based in Tamale. The operation also led to the arrest of Emmanuel Arthur, Head of Corporate Affairs of NAFCO.

The arrest followed Initial intelligence and assessment by EOCO which suggested that while serving as CEO of Buffer Stock between 2017 and 2024, Mr. Hanan Abdul-Wahab colluded with his wife, Faiza Seidu Wuni, Richard Sam Asante (Head of Finance), Bismark Owusu Boakye (Finance Department), and Emmanuel Arthur (Corporate Affairs Manager) and others to, to create an elaborate criminal enterprise that was used to steal and launder public funds from the Buffer Stock Company.

Within the period between 2017 and 2024, Hanan Abdul-Wahab, in concert with Richard Sam-Asante and Bismark Owusu Bokaye, orchestrated the transfer of Seventy-Eight Million Two Hundred And Sixty Nine Thousand, Eighty Four and Four Pesewas and Four Ghana Cedis (GH¢78,269,084.04) from the bank accounts of Buffer Stock Company to a private company linked to Hanan Abdul-Wahab, his wife and staff of buffer stock Company at Republic Bank and ECOBANK.

Evidence shows that the funds were instantly retransferred to companies owned by Hanan Abdul-Wahab himself and companies and entities owned and associated with and Hanan and his wife . Similarly Evidence show that between December 2017 and May 2019, Hanan Abdul-Wahab transferred Five Million, Four Hundred And Ninety Five thousand, Seven And Forty Eight Ghana Cedis and Thirty Six Pesewas (GH¢5,495,748.36 ) from Buffer Stock accounts to two bank accounts belonging to Aludiba Enterprise at Republic Bank and ABSA, a company he owns.

Aludiba Enterprise is not a registered supplier of Buffer Stock Company. Hanan Abdul-Whab between October 2019 to January 2022 also orchestrated some suppliers to transfer an amount of Eleven Million Nine Hundred And Ninety Eight thousand Ghana Cedis and fourty Eight pesewas (GH¢11,998,830.48) to an entity owned by a staff of buffer stock and later instructed the staff to re-transfer the funds to a company owned and run by Hanan Abdul Wahab and his wife.

In July 2022, investigations found that Hanan Abdul Wahab transferred GH¢251,050 from Buffer Stock Accounts to a bank account at Republic Bank belonging to Energy Partners Ltd, a company co-owned by the Hanan Abdul Wahab and Emmanuel Arthur, the Head of Corporate Affairs of Buffer Stock company.

Energy Partners is not a service provider for Buffer stock. The evidence gathered so far shows that they run this criminal enterprise under the pretext of supplying food items to schools under the School Feeding Program.

Seven entities linked to Mr. Hanan Abdul-Wahab and his wife were used as vehicles to receive and to launder the proceeds of crime from Buffer Stock. The money laundering took the form of property acquisitions across the country, including real estate and luxury goods using the same entities.

The entities in question are as follows:

• Alqarni Enterprise

• Aludiba Enterprise

• Energy Partners Limited

• Fa-Hausa Ventures

• Fa-Hausa Company Limited and

• Aludiba Foundation and

• Sawtina Enterprise (owned by a third party connected to the couple)

Bank documents obtained by the EOCO reveal that within the period that the suspects operated the criminal enterprise, Mr. Hanan Abdul-Wahab, his wife and their entities became the largest depositors of Republic Bank.

Investigations established that in 2018, Sawtina Enterprise, an entity owned by James Atieku-Apawu applied to become a licensed supplier to the Buffer Stock Company. This application was approved by his boss, Hanan Abdul-Wahab, knowing very well that his approval placed James Tieku-Apawu in a conflict-of-interest situation.

Documentary evidence from bank accounts of Buffer Stock revealed that between September 2018 and June 2024 Buffer Stock transferred a total of GH¢78,269,082.04 to Sawtina Enterprise’s bank accounts at Ecobank and Republic Bank respectively. The payments were supposedly to pay for food supplies made by Sawtina Enterprise to schools under the School Feeding Program (SFP).

Verified records, including waybills and store receipt vouchers (SRVs) from Buffer Stock, indicated that only GH¢27,389,872.00 out of payments to Sawtina Enterprise were backed by supplies. There is no evidence that the remaining GH¢50,879,210.04 paid to the enterprise was backed by food supplies or any service rendered to Buffer Stock.

A review of Sawtina Enterprise’s bank account revealed that the bulk of the payments which Buffer Stock made to Sawtina Enterprise’s bank accounts (about 98%) of the GH¢78,269,082.04 were instantly re-transferred to Alqarni Enterprise, Fa-Hausa Ventures and other entities owned and controlled by or affiliated to Hanan Abdul-Wahab and Faiza Seidu Wuni.

Under interrogation, Mr. Atieku-Apawu stated that, although some of the funds received into Sawtina’s Ecobank and Republic Bank accounts were for the few genuine supplies backed by waybills and Store Receipt Vouchers (SRV’s), in most instances no supplies were made but he noticed that Buffer Stock kept making payments to his company, Sawtina Enterprise.

He also admitted that other third-party companies which our investigations have established to be Licensed Buying Companies (LBC’s) or suppliers to Buffer Stock also made several payments into Sawtina’s account. He said he neither knew the promoters of these companies nor did his company have any business dealings with them.

He had no explanation as to why the millions were transferred into his company’s bank account but observed that those payments, whether from Buffer Stock or from third parties, were made into Sawtina’s account on the instruction of his then boss Hanan Abdul-Wahab.

He further explained that whenever such payments were deposited into Sawtina’s account, he was prompted by Hanan to expect the transfer and was later instructed on where to move or re-transfer the funds. In effect, Sawtina became a conduit for Hanan Abdul-Wahab and his wife to steal Buffer Stock funds without easy detection.

Transaction analysis of Sawtina Enterprise’s Republic bank account and entities used as vehicles to launder the proceeds of the criminal enterprise established by Hanan and his Wife Faiza corroborated the claims made by Mr. James Tieku-Apawu. For example, a review of some of the re-transfers of the funds paid to Sawtina Enterprise by Buffer Stock revealed the following:

As is typical of all investigations conducted by the EOCO, contemporaneous tracing of the proceeds of crime has been undertaken and can confirm that the couple purchased a number of high-end real estate properties from their ill-gotten wealth. The properties are as follows:

Five-bedroom house bought from Chain Homes Limited between February 2019 and December 2020 at a cost of $1,625,000. Of this amount, GH¢5,758,165.00 (equivalent to $230,841.00) was paid directly from the accounts of the investigated entities. The balance was paid in cash to Chain Homes by the couple;

In July 2020, the couple purchased a 3-bedrom house at Cantonments from Golden Coast Developer Ltd at a cost of $600,000.00 using two of their companies- Fa-Hausa Ventures (owned by the wife) and Fa-Hausa Company Limited (owned jointly by the couple). The land documents are registered in the name of the wife;

Between October 2019 and February 2021, the couple purchased plots at Finali’s Airport development site for USD $750,000.00. The total payments were made in cash in the name of Faiza Seidu Wuni.

Subsequently, in July 2021, Faiza Seidu Wuni signed a contract with a construction company, Mendanha and Sousa Construction Ltd at a cost of USD$691,650.00 to construct the shell and core of the building.

This excludes the cost of architectural designs from Ansara Architecture Pty Ltd based in South Africa. The building sitting on three plots is now estimated to be valued at about USD$2,5000,000.00.

The couple purchased 0.32-acre government land from one Anthony Duke Essien, a known government land sales agent named in both the demolition of the Nigerian High Commission and the Sale and demolition of the Bulgarian Consulate.

Duke Essian used his sister Antoinette Tsiboe Darko, a staff of Danquah Institute as a front, to purchase from the Ministry of Lands and the Land Commission at a price of GH¢307,200. Duke Essien then instantly sold the land to Hanan Abdul-Wahab and received about GH¢2,567,000.00. The payment came from the criminal proceeds from Buffer Stock through Sawtina Enterprise through Alqarni Enterprise and Hanan himself to Anthony Duke Essien.

On the instruction of his brother, Duke Essien, Antoinette then wrote to the Land Commission in March 2020 to instruct them that the lease should be in the name of Hanan Abdul-Wahab. In May 2020, she made a U-turn and wrote to the Lands Commission to withdraw the documents bearing the name of Hanan Abdul-Wahab and now replace it with his wife Faiza Seidu Wuni. The couple developed four units of 4-bedroom apartments on the said land. Property is yet to be valued.

Other properties acquired by the couple are as follows:

17-bedroom boutique hotel at Gumani in Tamale in respect of which the couple used Fa-Hausa Company Limited to sign a franchise with Villa Monticello for $250,000.00 in order to hide the hotel under the brand name of villa monticello.

4-bedroom bungalow situated at Dworwulu, Accra valued at GH¢4,142,451.00.

Three storey building (Chicken Republic) situate at Estate Junction, Tamale;

• Five-bedroom mansion at Kanvili, Dorado Street, Tamale

• Three bedroom house, Kpalsi, Tamale

• One storey building, No. 10 Selby Gardens, Achimota, Accra

• 27 acre plot of land, Estate Junction, Tamale

• 29 acre land, Close to Workers College, Tamale

We have frozen all these assets and will be taking steps to have them confiscated to the state in the course of the criminal proceedings. Also, in terms of liquid assets, we have frozen a fixed deposit account belonging to Mr. Hannan containing GH¢10,000,000.00 with Republic Bank, Labone Branch, Accra. Additionally we have also frozen several vehicles and over 61 luxury handbags

Ladies and Gentlemen:

On account of the foregoing, we have decided to charge Mr. Hanan Abdul-Wahab and his wife, Faiza Seidu Wuni with stealing, conspiracy to steal, wilfully causing financial loss to the state, using public office for profit, obtaining public property by false statements and money laundering. The charges will be filed on Friday, October 24, 2025.

Thank you for your attention.

NSS payroll scandal deepens after forensic audit

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Dr Dominic Ayine, Attorney-General and Minister of Justice Dr Dominic Ayine, Attorney-General and Minister of Justice

The Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Dr Dominic Akuruting Ayine, has revealed that a forensic audit conducted by the Auditor-General’s Department has uncovered a loss of GH¢2.2 billion through ghost names on the National Service Scheme (NSS) payroll, far exceeding the previously reported GH¢548 million.

According to him, the new figure is four times higher than the earlier amount recorded, following investigations that began in February 2025.

Speaking at the Government Accountability Series on Wednesday, October 22, 2025, Dr Ayine explained that the updated figure resulted from a comprehensive forensic audit carried out over several months.

“I wish to announce that the Auditor-General has conducted a forensic audit into the National Service scandal, and the total amount of money stolen or illegally spent now stands at GH¢2.2 billion, not the GH¢548 million uncovered by my investigators as of June 2025,” he stated.

He further indicated that his office would, moving forward, rely on the Auditor-General’s forensic audit report to prosecute all individuals implicated in the illegal activities currently under investigation.

SP/MA

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GFA Executive Council member Gifty Oware-Mensah pleads not guilty to GH¢38 million NSA scandal

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Gifty Oware-Mensah is a member of GFA's Executive Council Gifty Oware-Mensah is a member of GFA’s Executive Council

Gifty Oware-Mensah, a member of the Ghana Football Association (GFA) Executive Council and former Deputy Executive Director of the National Service Authority (NSA), has pleaded not guilty to five charges, including stealing and money laundering, in the ongoing GH¢38 million ghost names scandal.

She entered her plea at the Accra High Court on Wednesday, October 22, 2025, where she appeared alongside her legal team.

This comes just months after she was tipped to become the GFA’s Second Vice President, following FIFA’s approval of a proposal to elevate the Women’s Representative role to that position.

The charges against Oware-Mensah stem from allegations by the Attorney General’s Department, accusing her of stealing over GH¢38 million between February 2022 and March 2024 while overseeing finance, audit, and procurement at the NSA.

Gifty Oware set to become GFA’s second Vice President following Congress approval

Prosecutors claim she diverted GH¢31.5 million from a loan facility intended to support National Service Personnel into private company accounts linked to her, using “ghost names” from the Authority’s system.

She faces counts of stealing, willfully causing financial loss to the state, abuse of public office for personal gain, and money laundering.

Oware-Mensah, who maintains her innocence, remains an influential figure in Ghanaian football governance despite the deepening legal case against her.

FKA/JE

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JA Plant Pool overpaid by $2m under DRIP contract — Ayine

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Attorney General, Dr Dominic Ayine has revealed that the government has demanded a refund of $2 million from JA Plant Pool Ghana Limited after investigations uncovered financial irregularities in the District Roads Improvement Programme (DRIP) contract.

Speaking at the Government Accountability Series in Accra on Wednesday, 22 October 2025, Dr Ayine said the overpayment emerged during a forensic review of the $176 million contract awarded to the company.

“In the case of DRIP, JA Plant was overpaid by $2 million. The contract sum was $176 million. On the face of the contract, that is the sum that was stated. When we examined the invoices of payments, it was $178 million that was paid. So right away, there was a difference of $2 million. So we asked that the $2 million be paid back by JA Plant Pool,” he disclosed.

Dr Ayine further revealed that the investigation also uncovered tax evasion amounting to GH¢38.7 million, after 190 pieces of equipment were imported and cleared under false tax exemption claims.

“We also realised that 190 pieces of equipment were added and cleared without payment of tax. In other words, they were added to the release as if they were tax exempt,” he said.

“When they did the analysis, following the HS code, it came out that GH¢38.7 million of tax was evaded. So in respect of the two sums, we have made a demand on them to pay that money.”

The Attorney General added that his office has also identified significant over-invoicing of equipment purchased under the programme, with mark-ups ranging between 100 and 300 percent.

“We noticed that the equipment were over-invoiced by between 100–300%. For example, one piece of equipment that cost $40,000 was invoiced at $84,000. That is over 110%,” Dr Ayine explained.

He said a team of investigators is currently conducting a detailed item-by-item review of all equipment supplied under the DRIP contract to build a strong legal case.

“You can imagine all the equipment for all the districts, and we are going through each of them. And in criminal law, charges must be specific, and if you miss the specificity, your case will be thrown out,” he noted.

The revelations form part of a broader accountability drive aimed at retrieving misappropriated funds and holding individuals and companies accountable for financial breaches under previous contracts.

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Fans Gift BBNaija Star, Kaybobo N4m, 4 Bedroom Apartment And iPhone 17 Pro Max

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According to sources, the duplex is already paid for, with a year’s rent reportedly valued at over ₦11 million.

BBNaija star Kaybobo has expressed delight after receiving a fully furnished duplex in Lekki, Lagos, along with N4 million in cash, a brand-new iPhone 17 Pro Max.

We rejected offers for plea deal in Chairman Wontumi case – Dr Ayine

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Attorney General (AG), Dr Dominic Ayine

The Attorney General and Minister for Justice, Dr Dominic Ayine, has disclosed that his office rejected offers for a plea deal in the case involving the Ashanti Regional Chairman of the New Patriotic Party (NPP), Bernard Antwi-Boasiako, popularly known as Chairman Wontumi.

According to Dr Ayine, the Attorney General’s Department has adopted a firm policy to file charges against all suspects, allowing them to present any plea deals directly before the court rather than negotiating privately with the prosecution.

Chairman Wontumi, along with Kwame Antwi, a director of Akonta Mining, and the company itself, faces two separate charges of illegal mining (galamsey) currently before the High Court in Accra.

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Chairman Wontumi

Speaking during the Government Accountability Series on Wednesday, October 22, Dr Ayine reaffirmed his unwavering commitment to accountability and the protection of public resources. He stressed that he has not been influenced or pressured by any senior government official to reach settlements or drop charges.

I want to also let you know that I am under no pressure from any quarters to cut any deals. Mr President, who is my boss, has never put pressure on me. On the contrary, when I brief him, he gives me his blessing. He does not even express an opinion one way or the other. He simply says, ‘Dominic, I’ve heard you.

The Chief of Staff has never put pressure on me to cut a deal with anybody. The Secretary to the President, Dr Callistus Mahama, has never put pressure on me. On the contrary, he encourages me and tells me to keep going despite the stress. The Legal Counsel to the President, my former boss, has also never pressured me to reach any deal.


Dr Ayine confirmed that his office had turned down multiple requests for plea deals, including those related to the Wontumi case. He said:

Offers have been made and I have turned all of them down. I have told everyone, please go to court. If you want a plea deal, announce your intention before the judge. That is now my strategy.

He concluded by reaffirming his office’s resolve to ensure diligent and watertight prosecutions to uphold justice and accountability.

‘I won’t bow to pressure to rush cases’

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The Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Dr. Dominic Ayine, has pushed back against growing calls for his office to expedite prosecutions in cases involving high-ranking officials.

The Attorney General has faced increasing pressure from some civil society groups and political commentators to move quickly on cases involving alleged misconduct by public officials, but he maintains that due diligence remains his top priority.

Speaking at the Government Accountability Series on Wednesday, October 22, Dr. Ayine said he would not bow to public pressure to rush cases to court without adequate evidence, stressing that doing so could lead to embarrassment and failed prosecutions.

“It’s important that we do painstaking investigations. ORAL reports are still coming to my office. Those who are pushing me to go to court, and those who are saying that by now convictions should have been obtained, I know you have legitimate expectations of the government officials, including President John Dramani Mahama and the Attorney General. But we need to do a good job.”

Dr. Ayine said accountability and justice require time, emphasising that rushing to court before building a solid case could backfire.

“Accountability takes time, and so it’s important that Ghanaians exercise patience. Not that I will rush to court, and defence lawyers will come and raise objections, and my case will be thrown out. And the same Ghanaians who wanted me to go to court expeditiously will turn around and say Ayine is an incompetent Attorney General,” he cautioned.

He assured the public that his office is committed to ensuring justice through thorough investigations and fair prosecutions, adding that he would not compromise professionalism for public applause.

“I was never an incompetent lawyer in private practice; I don’t want to be in public service,” he said.

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‘Ghana risks losing more if Tullow deal is renewed’

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Professor Aaron Mike Oquaye is a former Speaker of Parliament Professor Aaron Mike Oquaye is a former Speaker of Parliament

A former Speaker of Parliament, Professor Aaron Mike Oquaye, has questioned the government’s decision to renew the operating licenses of Tullow Oil Ghana, warning that the move could expose the country to further financial losses within the petroleum sector.

In January 2025, Tullow Oil won a legal battle against the Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA) at the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) Tribunal in a tax dispute.

The ruling exempted the company from paying a $320 million back tax assessment issued by the GRA, reigniting debate over the robustness of Ghana’s petroleum agreements and fiscal oversight mechanisms.

IMF is a ‘no-go’ area, utilise natural resources – Prof Oquaye tells government

Speaking at an IEA Policy Dialogue in Accra on October 21, 2025, Professor Oquaye stressed that Tullow’s arbitration victory should serve as a wake-up call for Ghana to strengthen its management of natural resources and prevent future financial setbacks.

“The recent arbitration award by the International Chamber of Commerce in the case of the Republic of Ghana in London should teach us a lot. The IRS of Ghana made a calculation of how much money Tullow owed in taxes. Our agreements with them allow such outcomes. Having won their case, we are now to pay Tullow’s costs,” he said.

He also questioned the timing of Tullow’s push for a contract renewal, cautioning that Ghana should not rush into new agreements without first addressing the loopholes in existing ones.

“They have suddenly asked the government to renew their contracts, each of which expires in a few years. I would urge the government not to proceed any further,” he added.

SP/MA

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Asante Kotoko arrive in Morocco for WAC Clash

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Asante Kotoko SC have safely arrived in Morocco ahead of their crucial CAF Confederation Cup second-leg tie against Wydad Athletic Club (WAC).

Coach Karim Zito has named a 20-man travelling squad for the trip, featuring key players such as Aziz Haruna Dari, Patrick Asiedu, Francis Acquah, Amidu Peter, and Donzo Morifing.

The team will train later today to fine-tune preparations before Sunday’s decisive encounter in Casablanca.

Kotoko trail 0–1 from the first leg in Kumasi and will be aiming for a strong performance to overturn the deficit and progress to the next stage.

Afenyo-Markin demands parliamentary scrutiny of Ghana-U.S. deportee deal

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The Minority Leader in Parliament, Alexander Afenyo-Markin, has called on the government to submit a recent agreement between Ghana and the United States—regarding the acceptance of deported persons—for parliamentary approval in line with the 1992 Constitution.

Speaking during a leadership presser on Wednesday, October 22, during the opening of the Third Meeting of the First Session of the Ninth Parliament, Mr. Afenyo-Markin said it had come to light during the recess that the government had entered into an arrangement with the U.S. to accept certain deportees.

He described the development as a major foreign policy decision that must not be executed in secrecy or without parliamentary scrutiny, insisting that such agreements are constitutionally required to go through Parliament under Article 75.

“Agreements of such magnitude should be subject to parliamentary scrutiny under Article 75 of the 1992 Constitution,” the Minority Leader stressed. “We will demand that this arrangement be brought before Parliament for ratification.”

Mr. Afenyo-Markin warned that bypassing parliamentary approval on international agreements could set a dangerous precedent, undermining democratic accountability and Ghana’s sovereignty in global affairs.

He emphasised that foreign policy decisions must always reflect the nation’s values and uphold its dignity, cautioning the government against compromising national interests for political or diplomatic convenience.

“Ghana’s foreign policy must never be conducted in secrecy, nor should we compromise our sovereignty for expediency,” he said. “We urge the government to always place Ghana’s dignity first and ensure that any international agreements reflect our values and command the confidence of the Ghanaian people.”

Concluding his remarks, Mr. Afenyo-Markin reminded Parliament that Ghana’s progress over the years has been built on visionary leadership and the resilience of its people, urging the government to uphold transparency and constitutionalism in all its dealings with international partners.

“Ghana’s story is one of triumphs achieved through visionary leadership and the indomitable spirit of our people,” he said.

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Hit-and-run driver kills ‘pragya’ rider at One Leg Junction

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A 26-year-old Nigerian national has been killed in a suspected hit-and-run incident at One Leg Junction, a suburb of Millennium City in the Gomoa East District of the Central Region.

The deceased, identified as Ismaila Emeka, was a rider.

He was found dead in the middle of the road, lying in a pool of blood after reportedly being hit by a speeding truck in the early hours of Monday.

According to his friend, Anas Chuku, the deceased had not been feeling well and had planned to return to his hometown for medical treatment.

He recounted that they had gone to sleep the previous night, only to wake up to the shocking news of Emeka’s death.

Residents of the area have expressed concern over frequent speeding and reckless driving on that stretch, describing it as a death trap.

They are calling on authorities to install speed ramps and ensure regular police patrols to prevent further incidents.

Police in Gomoa East have since launched an investigation to identify and arrest the driver involved in the fatal accident.

Rashid Ibrahim elected 59th NUGS President

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Legal practitioner, Rashid Ibrahim has been elected as the 59th President of the National Union of Ghana Students (NUGS).

This follows a highly competitive election at the 58th Annual NUGS Delegates Congress held over the weekend.

The election, which was conducted peacefully and transparently, brought together delegates from universities, colleges, and pre-tertiary institutions across the country.

According to the official results released by the NUGS Electoral Commission, Lawyer Rashid Ibrahim secured 360 votes to emerge victorious, ahead of Agirapah Opoku, who garnered 321 votes, and Alvin Adjei Othcere, who obtained 289 votes. Other contenders included Latif Lawrence Jorhowie with 260 votes, Asare Bediako with 146, and Nazeer Saeed with 6 votes, out of a total of 1,382 valid ballots cast.

His victory has been described by many within the student movement as a reflection of a new era of purposeful, unifying, and visionary leadership for Ghanaian students.

Lawyer Rashid Ibrahim is a proud product of the University of Professional Studies, Accra (UPSA), where he earned his Bachelor of Laws (LLB) in 2023 and was called to the Bar in 2025. He is currently pursuing an LLM in International Business and Commercial Law at UPSA.

During his undergraduate years, Rashid established himself as one of the most influential and respected student leaders on campus — admired for his calm confidence, deep intellect, and unwavering dedication to service. He served in various student leadership and advocacy roles, where his ability to inspire trust, build consensus, and solve problems earned him the reputation of a leader who leads with principle and empathy.

Known for his collaborative spirit, Rashid consistently promoted unity and inclusivity among students, bridging divides and advancing constructive dialogue between student bodies and university management. His leadership approach — grounded in integrity, respect, and results — continues to define his public life.

As he assumes the mantle of leadership as NUGS President, Rashid Ibrahim has pledged to build on the solid foundation laid by the outgoing leadership, continuing their good work while introducing innovative reforms to make NUGS more responsive to the evolving needs of students.

“The work of NUGS is far from over. We are inheriting a strong legacy, and my goal is to continue that progress — to make NUGS more vibrant, transparent, and impactful,” he said after his election.
“I will lead with integrity and inclusiveness, ensuring that the voices of all students are heard, from basic school to tertiary level.”

His vision for NUGS focuses on strengthening institutional efficiency, advancing educational policy advocacy, promoting digital inclusion, and expanding leadership and career opportunities for students across Ghana and beyond.

DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.

DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.

Ghana Burns Millions While Gas Processing Plant Stalls

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Oil Production
Gas flames flaring up from an off shore oil vessel

Ghana’s petroleum industry finds itself trapped in an expensive paradox, flaring roughly 10.6 percent of its natural gas production while simultaneously importing costly diesel to power thermal plants, a situation costing the country an estimated $100 million annually in wasted resources and revealing critical infrastructure gaps that threaten both economic competitiveness and climate commitments.

The gas flaring problem, discussed extensively during the Public Interest and Accountability Committee’s recent mid year report launch, exposes the stark limitations of Ghana’s current processing infrastructure. Despite having what officials describe as a zero flaring policy, the country burned approximately 13.8 billion cubic feet of natural gas in the first half of 2025 alone, gas that could have powered homes, factories, and reduced dependence on expensive imported liquid fuels.

PIAC Chairman Constantine K.M. Kudzedzi acknowledged the contradiction when questioned about Ghana’s gas flaring practices. While the Environmental Protection Agency technically prohibits companies from flaring gas, the reality is that companies must flare excess production because Ghana’s sole operational processing facility, the Atuabo Gas Plant, cannot handle all the associated gas being produced from offshore fields.

“Gas flaring is an inevitable part of the whole industry,” Kudzedzi explained during the press briefing. “Once you are producing gas, you cannot use all the gas. And when you inject some into the well and then you use some biomass, you have to flare some of it.”

The fundamental issue isn’t whether companies flare gas but how much they’re forced to burn. Ghana produced about 130.4 billion standard cubic feet of raw gas during the first half of 2025, with the Sankofa Gye Nyame field accounting for 53 percent, Jubilee contributing 26 percent, and TEN providing 21 percent. Of that total production, operators flared 10.61 percent, down slightly from 11.53 percent during the same period in 2024.

That modest improvement masks a deeper infrastructure crisis. Between 2020 and 2024, Ghana flared approximately 102 billion cubic feet of gas from its fields, equivalent to an average daily supply of about 55 million standard cubic feet. This represents gas that could have powered thermal plants currently running on diesel, heavy fuel oil, and light crude oil at costs nearly three times higher than domestic gas.

PIAC’s head technical officer provided a blunt engineering perspective on Ghana’s zero flaring policy claims. When he first heard about the zero flaring policy, he admitted he “giggled as an engineer because you always have to flare gas.” Every country sets allowable limits for flaring, and the reasons for exceeding those limits depend on specific industry circumstances.

For Ghana, those circumstances revolve around inadequate processing capacity. When oil production increases, it brings more associated gas with it. Without sufficient infrastructure to process that additional gas, operators face a choice between curtailing oil production or flaring excess gas. Ghana has essentially been doing both, limiting oil output to manage gas volumes while still flaring what the Atuabo plant cannot handle.

The technical officer emphasized that declining oil production is partly driven by gas curtailment concerns. Producing more oil generates more gas, and without requisite processing infrastructure, operators must flare more, which creates environmental and regulatory problems that discourage production growth.

The solution, according to both PIAC and government officials, hinges on completing a second gas processing plant that’s been discussed for years but has yet to materialize. The new facility would convert previously flared gas into usable energy, addressing both the waste problem and Ghana’s growing electricity demand challenges.

PIAC has engaged extensively with the Ministry of Energy on the second processing plant, with technical officials participating in construction discussions. Richard Kojo Ellimah, a PIAC member, expressed cautious optimism after hearing the Energy Minister confirm cabinet approval for the project, calling for it to be treated as a national priority.

“If construction begins quickly, Ghana could begin benefiting from its excess gas within the next two to three years,” Ellimah said, according to reports on PIAC’s 2024 findings. The urgency reflects mounting financial and environmental pressures.

Ghana’s Energy Minister indicated the country needs approximately $1.2 billion in 2025 just to procure liquid fuels for thermal power generation. Using gas instead would save 50 to 60 percent of those costs, potentially freeing up $600 million annually, enough to fund construction of the gas processing plant itself.

But the infrastructure challenge extends beyond just adding processing capacity. PIAC’s technical officer urged journalists to champion establishment of industrial enclaves along gas infrastructure routes, whether pipelines, processing plants, or compressor stations. These enclaves would maximize utilization of the gas product passing through, creating economic value beyond just power generation.

The flaring situation is further complicated by Ghana’s contractual obligations with Eni, the Italian energy company operating the Sankofa field. During the briefing, officials explained why Ghana sometimes flares Jubilee gas while importing Eni gas, a situation that seems counterintuitive.

Ghana initially received foundation gas from Jubilee at zero cost for about a decade. After that period ended, any additional Jubilee gas requires payment. Meanwhile, Ghana has a take or pay contract with Eni, meaning the country must pay for contracted gas volumes whether it uses them or not. Any government would prioritize fulfilling the Eni contract to avoid paying for unused gas.

“If Eni gas is available and Jubilee gas is available, we will take Eni gas,” the technical officer explained. If Ghana needs 100 million cubic feet of gas daily, and Eni has 90 available while Jubilee has 80, Ghana takes about 80 from Eni and 20 from Jubilee. The extra Jubilee gas that can’t be taken gets flared because storage capacity is insufficient.

This contractual dynamic means Ghana sometimes burns its own gas resources while importing from Eni, a situation driven by financial obligations rather than operational logic. The take or pay arrangement essentially gives Eni priority in Ghana’s gas procurement, forcing Jubilee operators to flare excess volumes.

The environmental implications are significant. Gas flaring contributes to greenhouse gas emissions and air pollution, affecting both climate and human health. Ghana has committed to eliminating routine gas flaring by 2026, four years ahead of the global 2030 benchmark, responding to European Union methane regulations that are reshaping petroleum export markets.

The EU’s Regulation 2024/1787, which entered force in August 2024, targets methane emissions from global supply chains feeding European markets. With the EU consuming over 500 million tonnes of oil equivalent annually, exporters must now comply with stringent methane emission measurement, reporting, and verification standards or risk losing market access.

Victoria Emeafa Hardcastle, Acting CEO of Ghana’s Petroleum Commission, noted during Africa Oil Week discussions that these new rules are redefining petroleum business dynamics. Between 2025 and 2030, the EU will require exporters to demonstrate comprehensive methane management capabilities, making emissions control a matter of market access as well as climate responsibility.

Ghana’s accelerated 2026 target for eliminating routine flaring reflects recognition that compliance delays could prove costlier than accelerated investment. The country flared an estimated average of 32.68 million standard cubic feet per day between January and July 2024, resulting in approximately $210 million in lost commodity value and $287 million in total value chain losses.

ActionAid Ghana’s Country Director John Nkaw has called for stricter regulations and infrastructure investment to support commercialization of associated gas rather than allowing it to be wasted through flaring. The continued burning represents not just environmental damage but a massive opportunity cost for a country struggling with energy security and budget constraints.

The infrastructure limitations have serious implications for national energy security. As electricity demand grows, domestic gas supply is approaching capacity thresholds. The 2025 Energy Supply Plan reportedly highlights these constraints, with Ghana increasingly relying on expensive liquid fuels when domestic gas cannot meet thermal plant requirements.

PIAC officials stressed that while gas flaring falls somewhat outside their primary mandate, the committee has engaged with the Environmental Protection Agency and other agencies during validation exercises. The solution requires coordinated action across government agencies and sustained commitment to completing the second processing plant.

The timeline for that plant remains uncertain despite cabinet approval. Construction hasn’t begun, and previous timelines for similar infrastructure projects have proven optimistic. Each month of delay means more gas burned, more money wasted, and tighter compliance pressures as European regulations take full effect.

Ghana’s gas flaring dilemma ultimately reflects broader challenges in petroleum sector management. The country has significant resources but struggles with infrastructure development, contract management, and policy implementation. Solving the flaring problem requires not just building a processing plant but also developing industrial ecosystems that maximize gas utilization and creating regulatory frameworks that prioritize resource optimization over short term convenience.

For now, Ghana continues burning roughly $100 million worth of natural gas annually while spending $1.2 billion importing liquid fuels, a situation that makes neither economic nor environmental sense but persists due to infrastructure gaps and contractual obligations that constrain better alternatives.

‘HipLife is dead!’ – Tinny declares

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Tinny is a Ghanaian rapper Tinny is a Ghanaian rapper

Ghanaian rapper Nii Addo Quaynor, popularly known as Tinny has disclosed that the once-popular HipLife genre is now dead.

Speaking in an interview on Daybreak Hitz on October 22, 2025, Tinny shared his thoughts on how Ghana’s music industry has evolved since he began his career.

When asked how he would access the growth of the music industry over the years, he replied saying the music industry is growing.

He added that it’s satisfying seeing young artistes with great talents doing great works in the industry.

Tinny-1994132″ target=”_blank”>Mentorship is a calling, not for everyone – Tinny

“It’s growing and it’s wonderful to me. These young artistes coming up, I see great talents. Before they used to sound like themselves, but now I hear different talents” he said.

He continued, “To my knowledge when you talk music in Ghana, Ghana is on fire. Our population and what we do, to me, they don’t tally.”

However, the rapper lamented the decline of HipLife, the genre that once defined Ghana’s urban sound.

“The only thing is these days is that, hiplife is dead. I don’t see any upcoming artiste being asked what they do and they say they do hiplife music” he added.

FG/EB

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