Wed. May 1st, 2024

The Ghana Integrity Initiative (GII) has called on the government to ensure the full compliance of the Public Financial Management (PFMA) Act and Public Procurement (PPA) Act to safeguard all public funds and deliver value for money.

This follow issues by the government which had been specifically stated as worrying and had a potential to exacerbate the high perception of corruption by citizens with regards to the management of COVID-19 funds particularly.

The GII made the call to mark this year’s African Union (AU) Anti-Corruption Day and copied to the Ghanaian Times in Accra yesterday.

The day was commemorated on the theme “Strategies and Mechanisms for the Transparent Management of COVID-19 Funds.”

The GII indicated that its Corruption Risks Assessment revealed that, so far, no audit of the COVID-19 interventions had been conducted or published for public accessibility.

“Subsequent findings by others have corroborated this sad trend which has culminated in calls for an audit by the opposition Members of Parliament which the Speaker has instituted a bi-partisan committee to address,” the statement added.

The Initiative said the Finance Minister’s presentation in June, this year could not be construed to constitute an audit or accountability asit focused on the headline items rather than the detailed expenditure and compliance issues regarding the use of public funds.

Regarding the $10million loan to produce emergency Personal Protective Equipment kits and gear, it said there was evidence to suggest that there was no tendering notice given for the procurement.