8th June 2025 1:28:23 PM
2 mins readThe Special Prosecutor, Kissi Agyebeng, has stated that he is against calls for public officers to disclose their assets publicly.
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Justifying his opposition, he indicated that public officers would expose themselves to unnecessary attention and potential threats.
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This, he noted, could undermine their safety and make them targets of unwarranted scrutiny.
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“I do not and I will not add my voice to calls for the publication of assets for public scrutiny. In our experience, it will be unhelpful and would merely subject public officers to inordinate public curiosity and a specter of the real likelihood of reprisals against the assets,” he said.
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To him, fighting corruption effectively in the country requires transparency and the protection of individual rights.
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“In my estimation, publication of who has declared or has not declared his assets in the context of a workable asset verification and treason model would be sufficient to assure the integrity of the asset declaration system,” he added.
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The Special Prosecutor made these remarks at the High-Level Conference on Ghana’s anti-corruption architecture, held under the theme, “Revitalising the Anti-Corruption Architecture in Africa: Ghana’s Accountability Journey,” in Accra on Friday, June 6.
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The legal framework guiding asset declaration is the Public Office Holders (Declaration of Assets and Disqualification) Act, 1998 (Act 550). The Act mandates public officials to declare their assets before assuming office, every four years, and at the end of their term—submitting the forms no later than six months after any of these events.
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Importantly, Section 8 of the Act provides that allegations of non-compliance must be referred to the Commission on Human Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ), which is empowered to investigate and take appropriate action.
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President John Dramani Mahama submitted his asset declaration forms to the Auditor General on February 18 and issued a firm order to his appointees to follow suit by March, warning of sanctions for defaulters.
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On May 6, the President sanctioned his appointees who missed the March 31 deadline by directing them to forfeit their three months' salary, which will be channeled into the Ghana Medical.
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He gave a May 7 ultimatum, emphasizing that any official who fails to meet the deadline will be sacked.
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A report by The Fourth Estate revealed that several high-ranking officials have yet to fulfill their constitutional obligations. Out of 55 ministers and deputy ministers, nine have failed to declare their assets. Additionally, eight out of 32 presidential staffers and 37 out of 84 heads of state institutions appointed between January 15 and March 18 have not complied with the President’s directive.
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In the meantime, civil society groups and anti-corruption advocates have supported the full publication of asset declarations as a means to promote integrity and accountability.
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