The Ghana National Association of Teachers (GNAT) has raised reservations over the report by the Office of the Special Prosecutor (OSP) and the Controller and Accountant General’s Department (CAGD) released on Monday.
The Association says the process adopted in conducting the investigation focusing on employees in the Northern Region did not follow due process.
The Office of the Special Prosecutor (OSP) and the Controller & Accountant General’s Department (CAGD) joint investigation in the Northern region covered the government’s payroll administration, focusing on the Education sector and Tamale Teaching Hospital.
President of GNAT, Dr. Isaac Owusu, the two anti-graft institutions conducted the investigation without the knowledge of the Education Directorate nor the Education Ministry.
“This OSP issue was one of the cases we sent to the Labour Commission. And at the Labour Commission, the chief employer, which is the Director General of the Ghana Education Service and his sector Minister, Dr Yaw Adutwum, the commissioner asked them whether they were aware of the activity that the OSP was embarking on and they denied outright that they had no knowledge,” he said on Accra-based JoyNews Monday, May 20, 2021.
In a press statement issued by the OSP Monday, it has disclosed that a school whose teachers were being validated and paid monthly salaries was actually non-existent.
N/R: OSP, Controller-General discover non-existent basic school with staff on gov’t payroll
“It was discovered that a primary school in the Kumbungu District of Ghana Education Service did not exist at all. Yet, this non-existent contrived entity was represented as staffed and the purported staff were being validated monthly and being paid salaries,” the OSP said.
Additionally, some GH₵2.8m was discovered as unearned monthly salaries paid to ‘Ghost Names’.
“A staggering amount of GH₵2,854,144.80 was identified as unearned monthly salaries, attributed to individuals who were deceased, retired, no longer in their positions, flagged as missing, or whose whereabouts were unknown, commonly referred to as “Ghost Names.”
But the GNAT President took exception to these assertions. He said the OSP himself had indicated in his analogy that the investigation did not follow the right procedure.
He wondered how these findings were possible when the OSP, per his analogy, did not go through the right procedure.
“If OSP had taken pains to visit the directorate, after the investigations if he had asked the director of Bunkrugu that I have seen school A, do you have this in your record, he didn’t do any of it. We are not saying he should go and seek permission but look, this blockade of salaries cuts across the country including teachers on study leave,” he added.
The statement added that the OSP and CAGD will extend the investigations to other regions soon.
The OSP’s report indicated that “by blocking these payments and removing the corresponding individuals from the Government Payroll, the Republic saved GHC34,249,737.60 for the 2024 financial year.”