Accra, Feb. 8, - President Nana
Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo on Thursday delivered his second State of the Nation
Address to Parliament, assuring that country was on the right path for economic
prosperity.
The Ghana News Agency hereby
submit the full text of the President's address.
MESSAGE ON THE STATE OF THE
NATION DELIVERED BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC, NANA ADDO DANKWA AKUFO-ADDO,
ON THURSDAY, 8TH FEBRUARY, 2018, IN PARLIAMENT, PARLIAMENT HOUSE, ACCRA
Mr Speaker,
I am happy to be here again in
this august House, a place where I have experienced some of the most memorable
moments of my political career, and made some cherished friendships across the
political divide. I am glad too that, in accordance with protocol and
convention, First Lady Rebecca Akufo-Addo, Vice President Mahamudu Bawumia,
Second Lady Samira Bawumia, Chief Justice Sophia Akuffo, and the Justices of
the Supreme Court, Chairperson Nana Otuo Siriboe II, and Members of the Council
of State, Chief of Defence Staff Lt. Gen O.B. Akwa, Inspector General of Police
David Asante Apeatu, and the Service Chiefs, are all present. Mr. Speaker, the
House is duly honoured by the welcome attendance of the former Presidents of
the Republic, their Excellencies Jerry John Rawlings, John Agyekum Kufuor and
John Dramani Mahama, His Excellency the former Vice President of the Republic,
Paa Kwasi Amissah-Arthur, and former First Lady, Her Excellency Nana Konadu
Agyemang Rawlings.
A year ago, I came as our
newly-elected President into a House, where everybody was trying to get used to
new positions. There was a large number of fresh entrants, trying to find their
feet as the new honourable members. There were the hitherto Minority members,
trying to get used to being members of the Majority, and, then, there were the
former members of the Majority, trying to get used to their new role as members
of the Minority. The House had a new Speaker, who was beginning to fit
seamlessly into his new role.
A year later, we can safely say
that none of us now turns round in surprise, when addressed by our new titles.
We are all used to the reality, made possible by the expression of the free
will of the Ghanaian people on December 7, 2016.
Mr Speaker, at the beginning of
each session of Parliament, the President has a duty to come to this House, as
I have done today, to satisfy the constitutional requirement of delivering to
Parliament a Message on the State of the Nation, that is to report on how our
nation is faring after this year of change, and to share the prospects we can
look forward to in the year ahead.
I would like to start by
expressing my sincere gratitude to the House. When I told you I was in a hurry,
you promptly rose to the challenge. You
assisted me to appoint my excellent team of ministers, and constitute
the government, in record time. I understand that, since the inception of the
4th Republic, this, the 7th, has been the busiest Parliament. You have had 140
days of sittings, and I am told no Parliament, in its first session, has done
more than 130 days. This is to the collective credit of members on both sides
of the House and your respective leaderships, with the backing of the Right
Honourable Speaker and his Deputies.
In the process, this Parliament
has passed a number of bills relating to my flagship programmes. Again, I am
told it is a first in the 4th Republic that flagship programmes, and, in this
case, as many as five, have been passed in the first year of the government.
I am grateful, and look forward
to our continuing to work together to make our nation, Ghana, great and strong.
Mr Speaker, I believe that last
year, when I came to the House, I conveyed my dismay at the full extent of the
economic mess, in which our nation was mired. We had inherited an economy that
was in distress, choked by debt, and with macroeconomic fundamentals in
disarray.
You would recall, Mr Speaker,
that I said “we would have to implement some tough, prudent and innovative
policies to get us out of the financial cul de sac we were in”. I made some
brave predictions. I said we would “reduce significantly the budget deficit”,
and I said that, at the same time, we would grow and expand the economy.
I am glad to be able to report
that the Economic Management Team, under the stellar leadership of the strong,
brilliant economist, Vice President Mahamudu Bawumia, has risen to the
challenge, and the hard work is beginning to show positive results.
We have reduced taxes, we are
bringing down inflation and interest rates, economic growth is increasing, from
the alarming 3.6% at December 2016, to 7.9% in our first year, and the
indications are that it will be even better this year. We have increased our
international reserves, maintained relative exchange rate stability, reduced
the debt to GDP ratio and the rate of debt accumulation, we have paid almost
half of arrears inherited, and, crucially, we are current on obligations to
statutory funds. I am also pleased to report that the 3-year IMF-supported
Extended Credit Facility Programme, begun in 2015, comes to an end this year.
The relatively good macroeconomic performance in 2017 will strongly support our
successful completion of the IMF programme. We are determined to put in place
measures to ensure irreversibility, and sustain macroeconomic stability, so
that we will have no reason to seek again the assistance of that powerful
global body.
Mr. Speaker, we have restored
teacher and nursing training allowances. We have doubled the capitation grant,
and, to confound the sceptics and professional naysayers, we have implemented
Free Senior High School education. It has enabled 90,000 more students gain
access to Senior High School education, in 2017, than in 2016. Mr Speaker, we
have, nevertheless, been able to meet my promise made last year to the House,
and reduced the fiscal deficit from 9.3%, to an estimated 5.6% of GDP.
As I promised, our economists
have found imaginative ways to deal with the oppressive debt situation. This
has brought some relief, and the annual average rate of debt accumulation,
which, in recent years, has been as high as 36%, has declined to 13.6%, as at
September 2017. As a result, the public debt stock as a ratio of GDP is 68.3%,
against the annual target of 71% for 2017, and end 2016 actual figure of 73.1%.
As a result of appropriate policy, and the normalisation of the power situation
in the country, they have also engineered a spectacular revival of Ghanaian
industry, from a growth rate of -0.5% in 2016 to 17.7% in 2017.
Mr Speaker, I do not suggest, in
any way, that these headline-grabbing figures mean we are anywhere near
resolving our economic problems. I am saying, to borrow the language of the
economists, that, for the first time in a long while, our macroeconomic
fundamentals are solid, and all the critical indices are pointing in the right
direction.
And the world is taking notice of
Ghana’s economic strides. Earlier, in January, the World Bank stated that
Ghana’s economy would probably grow by 8.3% this year, which would make it the
fastest growing economy in the world.
And, then, last week, Bloomberg
described Ghana’s Stock Exchange as the best-performing Stock Exchange in the
world for January 2018. The report illustrated how the Ghana Stock Exchange
Composite Index has gained 19% since the start of the year, in dollar terms,
ahead of the Nigerian, Chinese and Brazilian Stock Markets. Ken Ofori-Atta, the
Finance Minister, is proving to be a national asset.
I know that, when it comes to the
economy, many of us have very low tolerance for what we consider as boring
figures, and we do not see that they affect the reality of our everyday lives.
But, as I said earlier in the year, this current set of boring figures happens
to spell good news for our economy.
There are figures that the most
innumerate among us can relate to, and which can hardly be described as boring.
I refer to the figures that emerge when you look at the difference between sole
sourcing of government procurement, and opening it to tender.
In 2016, the Public Procurement
Authority had six hundred and twenty two (622) Sole Source Requests. Five
hundred and ninety seven (597) of that number, 98%, was approved, and there
were 25 Rejections. There were five hundred and ninety two (592) Requests made
for Restricted Tenders, and five hundred and eighty seven (587) (99.15%) were
approved, and there were five (5) Rejections. A grand total of zero savings was
made.
In 2017, my first year in office,
three hundred and ninety four (394) Sole Sourcing Requests were made, out of
which two hundred and twenty three (223) (56.6%) were approved, and one hundred
and seventy one (171) (43.4%) rejected. There were three hundred and forty six
(346) Requests for Restricted Tenders, out of which one hundred and sixty seven
(167) (48%) were approved, and one hundred and seventy nine (179) (52%)
rejected. Now here is the interesting part. The savings, made over the year as
a result, amounted to some GH¢800 million.
Mr Speaker, the savings are
spectacular, and the figures are impressive, and, as my old Mathematics teacher
and, I suspect, everybody else’s Mathematics teacher would say, you cannot argue
with figures. We have taken the lessons to heart, and continue to improve upon
the government procurement process. I said I would protect the public purse,
and that is exactly what I am doing.
I believe it bears repeating here
that, thanks to these boring figures, for the first time in a long while, we
have been able to provide better budgetary support to the
constitutionally-mandated institutions that hold government accountable, i.e.
Auditor-General, Parliament, Judiciary, Ministry of Justice, Commission on
Human Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ), the Economic and Organised
Crime Office (EOCO), and the Police. Again, nowhere near the levels we would
all like, but, when you are starting from inside a deep hole, it takes a while
to make an impression on the ground, and the good thing is that we are pointing
in the right direction.
Mr. Speaker, thanks to the
diligence of the hardworking Minister for Employment and Labour Relations, Hon.
Ignatius Baffuor Awuah, MP for Sunyani West, we have been able to transfer some
GH¢3.1 billion of Tier 2 pension funds into the custodial accounts of the
pension schemes of the labour unions, funds that have been outstanding for six
years, and about which the labour unions had been loudly complaining. As a result
of engagements with organised labour, we ensured that the National Daily
Minimum Wage was determined and approved before the laying of the 2018 budget
by the Minister for Finance, and, happily, Mr. Speaker, there were no strike
actions last year. We will continue the constructive dialogue with organised
labour to find mutually satisfactory solutions to their concerns, in order to
guarantee industrial peace.
Mr Speaker, we are, therefore,
able to say with confidence that we are creating the atmosphere needed for the
creation of jobs, easily the most urgent problem that faces the government and
the nation. We have put in place the structures to help small and medium scale
enterprises and budding entrepreneurs through the challenging start-up years.
The availability of cheaper credit is good news for business in general, and
means better prospects for jobs.
Mr. Speaker, the subject of job
creation has to be at the top of my agenda. The number of young people, who
cannot find work, is staggering, and a threat to our national security. I am
determined to work to guarantee and secure the future of the young men and
women of our country. Every major policy that my government has implemented in
the past year has been essentially about the youth. We will equip the youth
with the skills that will enable them to be productive. As a start, this
government has established the Nation Builders Corps to employ 100,000 young
persons, in 2018 alone, to assist in public sector service delivery in health,
education, agriculture, sanitation and the revenue collection department of the
Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA). Stakeholders have had a series of meetings on
this policy, and the modules have been designed for each of the designated
areas. The details are currently being fine-tuned, and next month, this policy
will formally take off to join the other youth employment initiatives. Just
this morning, the respected Senior Minister, Yaw Osafo Maafo, launched the
Digital Marketing and Entrepreneurship Programme at the Accra Digital Centre.
This programme, with ten regional training centres, has already recruited 3,000
young, unemployed people, to undergo a 3-month all-expenses-paid training. I am
happy to announce that Ecobank Ghana Ltd has already offered to engage all
3,000 young people, after the training programme. This is just the tip of the
iceberg.
Mr Speaker, for years we have all
talked about the need to open up our country. We have all acknowledged that we
cannot hope to develop and transform our nation until we do so, and economic
and administrative activities are spread around, and not restricted to the
capital in Accra.
We have taken the clear and
unambiguous mandate given to this government by the people of Ghana as a spur
to take some of these long promised actions, indeed, to open up our country and
transform our economy. This year we are determined to take the decisions that
would change the destiny of our country.
On the first working day of this
year, I signed into law the Acts setting up the Development Authorities. Mr
Speaker, the creation of these Authorities marks a fundamental change in how
part of the development budget, i.e. the equivalent of $1 million per
constituency per year, is going to be spent in our country.
Local people will make the
decision on what their greatest needs are, and direct the funds to those areas.
Luckily, there is some consensus on what constitutes the basic infrastructure
needs in all communities, and we expect a smooth take-off in the work of these
authorities. We are asking that everybody is guided by the priorities set up in
the NPP Manifesto, on which we fought and won the mandate of the Ghanaian
people. We expect, for example, the provision of water and toilets to feature
prominently on the agenda of the Development Authorities, until those two items
can be taken off the must-do list of all constituencies around the country.
Sixty years after independence, the least we can, and should, do is to make
sure that every Ghanaian has access to water and toilet facilities.
Mr Speaker, the state of
sanitation in our cities is wholly unacceptable. Our cities have been engulfed
by filth. There is the urgent need for public authorities to find means of
making our cities clean, and, in the case of Accra, fulfilling my pledge, one
of the most ambitious of my presidency, to make it the cleanest city in Africa,
by the end of my term. Government is working with various private sector
operators to tackle this major challenge, with strategies that are intended to
effect a change in our attitudes towards waste generation, as well as to
improve dramatically our methods of waste management. This will be complemented
by the strict enforcement of sanitation rules and regulations. Urgent attention
will be given to clearing of rubbish all around the country. Apart from the
systematic efforts being made to resolve the legacy of inherited debts in the
sector, Government will spend, this year, an amount of GH¢200 million to
address the vexed issue of sanitation. I am confident that, by the time I come
back next year, God willing, an appreciable improvement would have been made in
the sanitation situation in the country.
Mr Speaker, there have been a
number of ambitious decentralization exercises in this country. We are
currently engaged in the very big exercise of creating new regions. It is a
long and rather-complicated process. We are in unchartered territory, but all
the indications are that it is going well, and I have been impressed to see
political opponents come together to argue, for example, the case for the
creation of an Oti or North Volta region. It is not often you see the veteran
statesman, Dr Obed Asamoah, the vocal Mr Kofi Adams, and the Volta Regional
Minister, Dr. Archibald Letsa, on the same side in a public argument. This
portends well, and I believe this exercise will be a success, especially as it
is being undertaken with scrupulous adherence to the teachings of the
Constitution in this sensitive area, under the skilful direction of the
experienced Minister for Regional Reorganisation and Development, Hon. Dan
Botwe, MP for Okere.
Mr. Speaker, yet another
ambitious decentralisation exercise is the expansion of full democracy to local
government. A critical step, to this end, is the direct election of
Metropolitan, Municipal and District Chief Executives on a partisan basis. It
is a firm manifesto commitment of the New Patriotic Party. Further, my
discussions with the nation’s political leaders, including the former
Presidents of the Republic, convince me that it is a step we must take. The
constitutional impediment to this, in Article 55 of the Constitution, an entrenched
clause, must, therefore, be removed. To ensure the judicious use of the
country’s resources, I propose that the constitutional processes for a
Referendum should be initiated in such a manner that the holding of the
Referendum will take place at the same time as next year’s District Assembly
elections. If successful, the outcome of the Referendum will mean that the
current set of MMDCEs will be the last batch of Chief Executives to be
appointed under the current system. I have no doubt that the resourceful
Minister for Local Government and Rural Development, Hajia Alima Mahama, MP for
Nalerigu Gambaga, will be able to shepherd this process to a positive
conclusion.
But, Mr Speaker, I am convinced
that the creation of new regions alone would not open up our country. That
would not, on its own, convince our young people that they do not have to come
to Accra to make a living. We have to improve upon the transportation system so
that no part of this country feels cut off, or can be deemed to be too far from
the centre.
That is one of the most effective
ways to stop the unsustainable rush to Accra. Traffic jams and overcrowding are
making our capital unattractive. There are certain inconveniences that people
adjust to. Traffic jams are not one of them. We are spending too much time
stuck in traffic, it is unproductive, it is not healthy, and it is expensive. I
fear that one of these days one more car will join the madness on the roads in
Accra, and our city will be completely gridlocked.
Mr Speaker, we have to build the
roads to open up and link up the various parts of the country. Journey times
between parts of the country have to be reduced. It is a shame that, some seven
years or so after work had started on the Eastern Corridor roads, we are
nowhere near completion. And, yet, this
is a strategic road, that would provide a much shorter and cheaper link between
the southern and northern parts of our country, and a suitable, alternative
route for our land-locked neighbours.
Unfortunately, this network of
roads has suffered from deliberate, unproductive propaganda. It is hard to
believe that, at a time when cocoa prices were going down, contracts were
awarded for three sections of the road to be funded by COCOBOD. It comes as no
surprise that COCOBOD has issued directives to suspend work on all three
sections, which come up to almost 100 kilometres. Mr Speaker, we are determined
to find the needed resources to complete the Eastern Corridor roads. As I have
heard it said among the Ewes, that which is important, you cook in an important
pot. Mr. Speaker, NU VEVE LA, WO DANE LE EZE VEVE ME.
There is a crying need for work
to be done on all our roads. The Western Corridor, the Central Corridor, trunk
roads, feeder roads, town roads, around the country, all require urgent
attention. We are determined to bring our road network to a befitting status,
and this year we shall witness much more activity on the roads.
In our current economic
circumstances, we are turning our attention to private sector participation to
raise the funds to do what needs to be done. I must make mention of the work
being done to restore the Accra-Tema motorway to its iconic status. With help
from Japan, a loyal friend of Ghana, work is starting to build a three-tier
interchange at the motorway roundabout, and the plans for expansion into a
six-lane motorway will be implemented from this year.
Mr Speaker, if we are to open up
our country, we have to build a fast, safe and reliable railway network. Last
year, I made a brave assertion in this House by stating that the Takoradi to
Paga railway would be initiated in the year 2017. I am happy to report that we
are making progress. We are in the final stages of agreeing with a significant
investor the terms of a BOT Agreement, from Takoradi to Kumasi, which will be
presented to Parliament this session. There is already a contractor on site for
the construction of the Kojokrom to Manso section of the Takoradi to Kumasi
rail line. The process has commenced to select a suitable partner for the
construction of the Eastern Line, from Accra to Tema to Kumasi. We aim to break
ground this year. The Central Spine, from Kumasi to Paga, is also receiving
attention, and consultants have been engaged to advise government on the best
model for the development of the line.
Mr Speaker, with reference to the
Ghana and Burkina Faso rail interconnectivity, the two countries are in earnest
discussions as to the realisation of the project. There are fortnightly
meetings, either in Accra or Ouagadougou, and we are confident that
deliberations will conclude, and actual construction will commence by the third
quarter of this year.
Mr Speaker, I know I am not
saying anything new exactly; every government has said it, and it has been in
every plan we have drawn up in this country since independence. But the
difference this time is that we have started, and the dream of a modern railway
network in our country will become a reality during the tenure of this
administration.
Mr Speaker, a modern, reliable
network of roads, railways, water transport and airports would transform our
country, and I am delighted to note that fresh enthusiasm has entered the
aviation sector, under the guidance of the dynamic Minister for Aviation,
Cecilia Abena Dapaah, to link up all parts of the country by air.
Mr Speaker, the advance of
technology means we can reach people, and get a lot done without much physical
movement. The cyber population, that is busy on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram,
WhatsApp and other social media outlets, would testify that Ghana is very much
part of the virtual world and its activities. More and more of us are banking,
and paying our bills, online. A wealth of knowledge and information is now
available on the net to make teaching and learning easier. We are working to
make the child that sits in a classroom in Zebilla have the same opportunities
as the child in a classroom in Ridge, in Accra. In their own way, these modern
communication tools are opening up our country and the world to us all.
The start of the digital address
system, the introduction of paperless transactions at our ports, the rapid and
continuing spread of broadband services are all helping to formalise and
modernise our economy, thanks to the creative leadership of the intrepid
Minister for Communications, Hon. Ursula Owusu-Ekuful, MP for Ablekuma West.
Furthermore, subsequent to Cabinet approval, the framework agreement between
Ghana and the Republic of Mauritius, for an initial investment in the
development of a technology park in Dawa, in the Greater Accra Region, has been
ratified by Parliament for implementation to begin. Unfortunately, and
predictably, a whole new set of dangers of cyber insecurity and fraud have
emerged with these modern tools. We are working to strengthen cyber security to
build confidence, and protect the use of electronic communications in national
development, and ensure that our young technologically savvy people would keep
Ghana firmly in the exciting IT economy and its many opportunities.
Mr Speaker, we need an educated
and skilled workforce to be able to operate the modern economy we are creating.
The Free SHS is a start towards this goal. It is a policy that has come to
stay. We are reforming the schools’ curricula to deal with the weaknesses in
our education system, and lay greater emphasis on Science, Technology,
Engineering, Mathematics (S.T.E.M), reading, history, and technical and
vocational skills. A look at the national budget would tell you we are spending
a lot of money on education, and I am certain that it is a worthwhile
investment, being brilliantly supervised by that charismatic Minister for
Education, Hon. Dr. Matthew Opoku Prempeh, Member of Parliament for Manhyia
South. It is, in my view, also important that the reform of our schools’
curricula should instil in our youth respect for the traditional values of
discipline, fellow-feeling, hard work, honesty, integrity, and patriotism,
without which no healthy, social development can occur.
In much the same way, we dare not
compromise on the health of the population. We have cleared a substantial part
of the debts and arrears that were choking the National Health Insurance
Scheme, courtesy of the prudent management of the able chartered accountant,
Health Minister Hon. Kwaku Agyemang Manu, MP for Dormaa Central. This has led
to the revival of the NHIS, and the renewal of respect for the NHIS card. The
health needs of our people are being better served. Moreover, as we work to
open up the country, I hope that our efforts at improving the conditions of
work for health workers would be appreciated, and there would no longer be the
reluctance to serve in some parts of Ghana.
Mr. Speaker, in line with our
commitment to building a fair and inclusive society, we promised, last year, to
increase the share of the District Assemblies Common Fund to Persons With
Disabilities from 2 percent to 3 percent, and we delivered. Effective July last
year, the policy of ensuring that 50% of the persons who manage the country’s
toll booths are Persons With Disabilities started. Nonetheless, we are
determined to address the other concerns of Persons living With
Disabilities.
A healthy nation, Mr Speaker, is
a well-fed nation. For generations, we have bemoaned Ghana’s reliance solely on
rain-fed agriculture. This means the slightest change in the rainfall pattern
exposed our farmers to the loss of a season’s harvest. It is a disgrace that we
have had to rely on our Sahelian neighbours to make up the deficit in foods,
such as vegetables.
This year, the
One-Village-One-Dam project starts full operation. It is a simple, low-tech
project, but these dams will make a big difference to all our lives and the
livelihoods of our farmers. Already, many of the little dams that had been
abandoned, have been rehabilitated and brought back into use. A deliberate and
specific intervention to help farmers is paying off. Our farmers can see that
the government is putting resources to back up the usual words. The 50% subsidy
on fertilizer, and the increase in the provision of extension services, are
making a great difference to the performance of Ghanaian agriculture.
Under the Planting for Food and
Jobs scheme, we are witnessing a fresh interest in farming. The success of the
first year has encouraged us to increase the scope of the programme, and, this
year, some half a million farmers would be signed on, up from the figure of two
hundred thousand (200,000) last year. That champion of Ghanaian farmers, the
Minister for Food and Agriculture, Dr. Owusu Afriyie Akoto, is doing a yeoman’s
job.
Mr. Speaker, fishing in our
country, an industry that provides a living for ten percent of the population,
has been bedevilled by many problems in the past. The fishing harvest has gone
down dramatically, and we have had to depend more and more on imported fish. We
have started work to tackle these problems. This past year, we made sure that
the close season was respected not just by the industrial tuna vessels, but,
also, by the trawlers. We will adhere to this policy for the foreseeable
future, which should help us replenish our depleted stocks.
More effective measures are being
taken against illegal, unreported and unregulated methods of fishing. We have
also instituted measures to avert premix diversions, and strict auditing of
landing beaches are in place. I can state that, since November, there has been
no report of premix diversion, a marked improvement from the past. Mr. Speaker,
I believe that the future lies in the promotion of aquaculture, and we have set
about it with a lot of enthusiasm. We have identified 100 dams in five regions
across the country – Upper East, Upper West, Northern, Volta and Western – and
stocked them with fingerlings. This is the start of big things to come, due to
the efforts of the forceful Minister for Fisheries and Aquaculture, Hon. Elizabeth
Afoley Quaye, MP for Krowor.
Mr Speaker, agriculture forms the
backbone of our flagship 1-District-1-Factory programme. The majority of the
proposals that have been evaluated and accepted for support under the scheme
are agro-based. It is food processing, after all, that has been the take-off
point for industrialization in most developed societies. It also fits in with
our determination to open up our country, and make jobs and facilities
available in all parts of the country.
Mr Speaker, problems associated
with our environment and the galamsey phenomenon have taken up a lot of the
time and energy of this government. The fight against galamsey is being
spearheaded by a high-powered Inter-Ministerial Committee, led by the
globally-acclaimed Ghanaian scientist, Prof. Kwabena Frimpong Boateng, Minister
for Science, Technology, Environment and Innovation, supported by the
indefatigable Minister for Lands and Natural Resources, John Peter Amewu. This
Committee is waging a valiant struggle to bring the galamsey phenomenon under
control. Its work has received, thankfully, the wide support of the media. Mr
Speaker, we have had to ban small-scale mining for the past nine months. We
acknowledge that the banning of small-scale mining cannot be the long-term
solution in a country such as ours, which is blessed with so many minerals;
but, as the saying goes, desperate situations call for desperate remedies.
We cannot look on, as our very
existence as a country is put in jeopardy and our water bodies, forests and
land mass are destroyed. Even with the ban, it has been a never-ending battle
with the galamseyers, and I am sure the House will want to join me, in paying
tribute to the members of our forces in the Operation Vanguard that are
protecting our environment. They are Ghanaian patriots of the first order. We
have started various schemes to find sustainable alternative sources of income
for the galamsayers. Mr Speaker, nothing will ever equate the attraction of the
search for gold or diamond, and maybe the drama of actually finding some, but
this generation of Ghanaians dares not preside over the destruction of our
lands. The state of our rivers and forests remains a great cause for worry, and
it is our sacred duty to protect them. I hope I can count on the total support
of the House to help nurse our degraded lands and rivers back to health.
I am equally grateful to those
chiefs, who have supported the fight against galamsey. My government will
continue to reach out to our traditional rulers, so that, together, we can
address pressing issues facing our nation, and its peace and stability.
Mr Speaker, there is relief in
some areas, and I refer specifically to the spectacular improvement in our
power supply problems. A lot of hard work has gone into easing the intolerable
debt situation that threatened to paralyse the energy industry. We still have
problems with the cost of power, and we are working to put Ghana at a
competitive advantage. We intend to find
private sector operators to buy into the state owned thermal plants, and inject
the capital needed to bring power tariffs down for both domestic and commercial
consumers. The most reliable, and, ultimately, cheapest answer to our power
needs, lies with renewable energy sources. We shall promote and
enthusiastically encourage investment and use of renewable energy. I am sure
that the House shares my relief that DUMSOR is no longer part of our everyday
lexicon. Long may it stay so, as we applaud the efforts of the tireless
Minister, Energy Minister Boakye Agyarko.
Mr Speaker, the safety and
security of our people are at the heart of all that we do. Ghanaian citizens
have a right to expect to go about their daily lives in an atmosphere of peace.
A Ghanaian has a right to expect that those who break the law must be subjected
to the sanctions laid down under the law. The police, the prosecution services
and the judiciary owe it to all of us to make us feel and be safe. I do not
need to repeat that crime wears no political colours, and I am certain that
message has gone down to all. Mr Speaker, the law enforcement agencies will
crack down very hard on all those who would disturb the peace of our nation. We
will give the Police the resources they need to do their job. An initial amount
of GH¢800 million is being made available to procure and supply, within the
next six months, critical, modern policing equipment and gadgets to enhance the
capacity of the police to enforce law and order, including one thousand (1,000)
vehicles, motorbikes, and ammunition. The equipment is to facilitate
visibility, mobility and improved responsiveness of the police to ensure a
safe, secure and peaceful economic and social environment for Ghanaians to work
and thrive. Already, the successful renegotiation of existing contracts has
enabled us purchase, forthwith, 100 vehicles for the Police.
In the medium to long-term, we
will purchase drones and helicopters to assist the police combat violent and
environmental crime. The crime laboratories will be modernised, and properly
equipped to provide the necessary support. The police intelligence unit will
also be strengthened. The perennial problems associated with police
accommodation will be tackled, and a compensation package introduced to cover
officers in their line of duty.
Mr. Speaker, I am aware that the
entire nation is extremely anxious and perturbed by the activities of the
migrant, nomadic herdsmen in the country. We are rehabilitating the kraals or
ranches that were abandoned after the Kufuor-led NPP government left office in
2009. They will become operational shortly to provide secure, grazing places
for cattle. At the same time, efforts are also being intensified to find an
ECOWAS-wide solution to an issue, which goes beyond the boundaries of our
country, and is affecting the entire West African region.
Mr Speaker, we shall not allow
miscreants of any sort to terrorize our population; and I promise that there
will be no hiding place for criminals. I am certain that the interventions we
are introducing will boost morale in the service, and I urge the House and all
citizens to support the police to deliver the service we deserve. The
formidable Minister for the Interior, Hon. Ambrose Dery, MP for Nandom, needs
our effective co-operation to carry out his all-important functions.
In much the same way, we are
beginning to address the problems of our Armed Forces. I am happy to report
that work has started on the Barracks Regeneration Programme. The acute
accommodation problems that face our Armed Forces must be, and are now being
tackled by that energetic Minister for Defence, Hon. Dominic Nitiwul, MP for
Bimbilla. We know that it is in all our interests, that those charged with
ensuring our security, and who put their lives on the line for our safety, are
able to concentrate on their jobs without distractions like inadequate and
inappropriate housing. It is vital that all of us give maximum support to the
noble and brave men and women of our security services, involved in Operation
Calm Life, Operation Vanguard, and Operation Cow Leg, aimed at guaranteeing the
safety of our people, the integrity of our environment, and the peace of our
nation.
Mr Speaker, the housing deficit
is not limited to our security services, it is a nationwide problem that is
caused mostly by the intolerable pressure on land prices. This has put
affordable housing out of the reach of most people. We have begun the difficult
process of making housing affordable for Ghanaians. Government, last year,
abolished the 5% VAT/NHIL on real estate sales, and continues to create a
conducive environment that is reducing interest rates on mortgage loans.
Discussions are also on-going between the Pensions Regulatory Authority and the
Banks to underwrite an effective mortgage system. This will facilitate access
to housing for the ordinary budget. Government will also continue to create the
enabling environment that will promote private sector investment in cheaper
housing for the people.
Mr Speaker, I am sure no one
needs reminding in this House that I have signed into law, the Office of
Special Prosecutor Act, an essential step in our overall strategy to combat
corruption. I look forward to the House dealing speedily with the process of
confirmation of the nominee, a person of proven professional ability, with an
established record of integrity and independence of character. Here again, we
are in unchartered waters, but I am convinced that there is enough goodwill in
the country to propel the first occupant of this position into setting a good
and firm foundation for the position of the Special Prosecutor.
Mr Speaker, year in, year out,
the nation’s Auditor-General produces a report on our public finances. It is
often full of grand cases of corruption in our public services. The
Auditor-General’s Report on MDA liabilities as at 31st December, 2016, makes
truly alarming reading. I make reference to the fact that a staggering amount
of GH¢5.4 billion has been identified as constituting fictitious claims. In the
course of this address, Mr Speaker, the House has heard me struggle to identify
a source of funding to build our roads. Every day, we hear reports on our
radios and televisions of dilapidated classrooms, and children who sit on floors
at school. Just think of the difference that GH¢5.4 billion would make to the
nation’s finances. That would certainly be enough to build and furnish hundreds
of classrooms, and construct the Eastern Corridor roads. Every citizen is
affected by acts of corruption, and we should all work to tackle them.
Government has an obligation to treat the Auditor-General’s Report seriously,
and to work to retrieve illegally acquired monies from those who would
impoverish us all. The role of OccupyGhana, in increasing awareness of the
importance of the work of the Auditor-General, should be recognised.
Mr. Speaker, the Preamble to the
Constitution of the Republic enjoins each one of us to uphold the principles of
Freedom and Justice, Probity and Accountability. In furtherance of these
principles, I have made it publicly known that anyone, who has information
about acts of corruption by any of my appointees, should bring it forward, and
should be prepared to back it up with evidence, for I will have it
investigated. So far, every single alleged act of corruption levelled against
any of my appointees has been investigated by independent bodies, and, in some
cases, by Parliament itself, and the findings made public. From the allegations
against the Minister-Designate for Energy at his parliamentary confirmation
hearings; to that against the CEO of BOST; to those against the two deputy
Chiefs of Staff; to the conflict of interest allegations against the Minister
for Finance; and, most recently, to the claims of extortion against the Trade
and Industry Minister – they have all been investigated, and no evidence has
been adduced to suggest any act of corruption, conflict of interest or
wrongdoing. It appears, however, that some are determined to stick to their
politically-motivated view that there has been corruption. This, surely, is not
helpful. It is important to note that, in my first year of office, despite
having a clear parliamentary majority, two separate bi-partisan probes in
Parliament have been established to inquire into allegations of corruption, as
against zero in recent years, notwithstanding the persistent calls by the then
Minority over several allegations. Mr. Speaker, with the greatest of respect,
and in the words of the articulate Minister for Information, Mustapha
Abdul-Hamid, no matter how long a log stays under water, it will never become a
crocodile.
Mr. Speaker, there was great
relief around the country when the International Tribunal for the Law of the
Sea found in our favour in the maritime boundary dispute with Cote d’Ivoire, a
dispute which was litigated by successive governments in the national interest,
the last lap being run by the able Attorney General, Ms Gloria Akuffo. In our
celebrations, we did not forget that good neighbourliness is the hallmark of
our foreign policy, and I am glad to state that our good relations with Cote
d’Ivoire have not been affected in any way by the resolution of the dispute.
Indeed, Cote d’Ivoire’s renowned President, His Excellency M. Alassane
Ouattara, at my invitation, paid us a memorable, official visit, after the
ruling, to underline his country’s determination to maintain, if not deepen,
its good relations with our own.
In fact, as you may remember, he
and I signed, on that occasion, L’Accord Strategique de Parteniariat (A
Strategic Partnership Agreement, for those who find French difficult), to
emphasise the enhanced relationship we both seek for our two neighbouring
countries. Another obvious, immediate benefit from the sensible reaction of
both sides to the outcome of the dispute is the subsequent agreement by
ExxonMobil, the world's largest publicly traded oil and gas company, to explore
and develop, with us, potentially rich oil blocks that were affected by the
dispute.
Mr. Speaker, much as we all
recognise the importance of exploiting the offshore hydrocarbon resources of
our nation, I think it equally critical for us not to ignore the possibilities
of our onshore deposits, especially in the Voltaian Basin. So, last year, I
directed our state-owned oil development company, the Ghana National Petroleum
Corporation (GNPC), to pay particular attention to this potential. It is good
to hear that that directive appears to be yielding dividends, as GNPC, from the
results of its pilot survey in the Voltaian basin, has established the presence
of a working petroleum system. I hope that, eventually, there will be something
big for us to cheer about.
Mr. Speaker, this year, we will
continue the process of passing the Legislative Instruments of the National
Youth and Sports Act, pursue the enactment of the draft National Sports College
Bill, and create a Sports Fund to improve sports development in the country.
Government also remains committed to the development of football in the
country. We have begun the rehabilitation of the Accra Sports Stadium, aka
Ohene Djan Sports Stadium, and in partnership with the Inner City and Zongo
Development Ministry and the Ghana Football Association, we are constructing a
number of football pitches in the Zongos and across the rest of the country, to
aid in the revival of colts football, which has been responsible for the
production of talents like Abedi Pele and Tony Yeboah. We need to catch the
talents at a young age, if Ghanaian football is to continue with its traditions
of excellence, and perform well on the national and international stage.
Mr Speaker, we, in Ghana, are
proud members of regional, continental and global communities. Since my
inauguration, I have been active, with the help of the eloquent Foreign
Minister, Hon. Shirley Ayorkor Botchway, MP for Anyaa Sowutuom, in keeping up
and promoting the historical role of Ghana within these communities, a role of
independent, sovereign action in the supreme interest of the Ghanaian and
African peoples. I have travelled around our neighbourhood and beyond, and I am
glad to report that the Black Star is shining. It is the reason for the
unprecedented numbers of world leaders – African, Asian and European – who have
thronged our shores this past year, and enjoyed our renowned Ghanaian
hospitality. It explains also the warmth with which I am greeted wherever I go
in the world.
Mr Speaker, a country’s image
turns on the most unlikely things and events. It could be because of the
exploits of a football team, like Brazil, it could be because of the exploits
of one athlete, like Frankie Fredericks for Namibia or Maria Mutola for
Mozambique, it could be because of a highlife connoisseur like E.T. Mensah for
Ghana, a singer/trumpeter like Hugh Masekela for South Africa. The image of a country
can be made forever, because of a William Shakespeare or an Anton Chekov or a
Chinua Achebe or an Ayi Kwei Amarh. The image could hinge simply on a Mona Lisa
painting or a David Adjaye’s inspired structure.
I am, therefore, very much aware
that we have to create the space and atmosphere for our artists and creatives,
and we shall support them. The foundations for the passing of the Creative Arts
Bill have been laid, and, ultimately, processes for the setting up of the
Creative Arts Fund will be completed to enable our creative artists to access
funds to boost their art.
Mr Speaker, as we make progress
in our undertakings, more and more people will come to Ghana to find things out
for themselves, to conduct business and, increasingly, simply as tourists to
experience our country and enjoy themselves. I am happy to report that we have
now recognized the need to go further than our reputation for being hospitable.
We are building a Ghana, where tourists will feel at home, and we shall feel
proud when they say “I was in Ghana.” On December 15, 2017, I joined the chiefs
and people of Osu and Gbese to cut the sod for the 241-acre Accra Marine Drive
Project. This project, during construction and upon completion, will generate
thousands of jobs for the local community and across the value chain, and
position Ghana as a key tourism destination.
Mr Speaker, I have an apology to
make to the House. I promised last year we would endeavour to pass into law the
Affirmative Action Bill. This did not happen. My commitment to the promotion of
the advancement of women is without question. Women constitute the majority of
the population, and our success or otherwise as a nation will be measured by
how well women are doing. The Bill will definitely come to Parliament this session.
In the meantime, I have thrown my
full weight behind the HeforShe campaign, and the Gender and Development
Initiative for Africa (GADIA), an initiative stemming from my position as the
African Union’s Gender Champion. I urge all Ghanaian males to join together in
giving Ghanaian females the dignity they deserve, as tenaciously promoted by
the polyglot Minister for Gender, Children and Social Protection, Otiko Afisa
Djaba. I further entreat all of us, male and female, to support the
implementation of the 2030 United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, which
have been incorporated into Government’s
Coordinated Programme of Economic and Social Development Policies, which was
laid before this House on 13th November, 2017, and the execution of which will
ensure that no Ghanaian is left behind.
Mr Speaker, on 7th January, the
4th Republic attained 25 years of age, its Silver Jubilee. It has proved to be
the most enduring and most successful of the four republics of our history. Its
Constitution has enabled us to establish our State on sound democratic
principles, on the basis of the separation of powers, the rule of law and
respect for human rights. It has witnessed three peaceful transitions, through
the ballot box, from one democratically elected government of one party, to
another of another party. It has promoted our nation as a beacon of stability,
and a model of democratic engagement on the African continent. It was to
celebrate this collective achievement of the Ghanaian people and the unity of the
Ghanaian nation that I organised, on that day, an inter-faith religious
ceremony of thanksgiving to Almighty God, graced by the presence of my three
predecessors, their Excellencies the 1st, 2nd and 4th Presidents of the 4th
Republic, Jerry John Rawlings, John Agyekum Kufuor and John Dramani Mahama. I
thank them for their contribution to the service, and thank all the Eminent
Clergy, of both the Christian and Islamic persuasions, who conducted and
participated in the solemn, moving ceremony. Long may the 4th Republic
flourish.
Mr Speaker, our nation is on the
right path. We will build a Ghana Beyond Aid. I thank you very much for your
attention. May God bless us all, our Parliament, and our nation Ghana, and make
her great and strong.
GNA

No comments:
Post a Comment