Adaklu lawmaker Kwame Agbodza has said he has picked up signals that President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo intends to use the Agenda 111 project to mobilise revenue to support Dr Mahamudu Bawumia’s campaign for the presidency in future elections.
Mr Agbodza made the claim on TV3’s New Day show with host Johnnie Hughes on Monday, August 23.
“For the first time in our history, a president has decided to personally select contractors and consultants for 88 projects, perhaps, as I am hearing, just to raise funds for Dr Bawumia,” Mr Agbodza said on the New Day show with Johnnie Hughes on TV3 Monday, August 23.
But Mr Dennis Aboagye, a former Municipal Chief Executive of Akuapem North, said this claim is unfounded and should be ignored.
He explained on the same show that if the president wanted to steal with this project, he could have built them at a cost far more than what the National Democratic Congress (NDC) did.
He stated that these hospitals are cheaper than the projects undertaken by the Mahama administration; hence it cannot be accurate that Mr Akufo-Addo intends to steal from the people through this particular project.
He said, “It is not true that the president is personally selecting contractors; it is not the president; it is at the office of the chief of staff. It is a palpable falsehood that the president is picking contractors to raise funds for Dr Bawumia.
“Even these hospitals we are building, they are 50 per cent cheaper than the hospitals the NDC built, and so if anybody wanted to steal money, we would have built the hospital at the cost higher than what they did.”
“The cost of building these hospitals under Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo is 50 per cent cheaper than how much they built,” he reiterated.
President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, on Tuesday, August 17, commissioned the Agenda 111 project, which will ensure the construction of 111 hospitals across the country.
During the commissioning of the project in Trede in the Ashanti Region, the president said, among other things, that the project will be providing 20,000 jobs for health professionals when completed.
He said the Ministry of Health is going to recruit more doctors, nurses and pharmacists when the project is done.
He also said that more indirect jobs are also going to be created by the project implementation.
The president further indicated that the Covid-19 pandemic had exposed years of underinvestment in Ghana’s health sector.
To that end, he said his administration is improving on the investment in the health sector of the economy.
He said, “I am glad that the biggest ever investment in the nation’s healthcare is being made. We have met this morning because of the ravages of Covid 19, which has affected every country on the planet. For us in Ghana, not only has the pandemic disrupted our daily lives, but it has also exposed the deficiencies with our healthcare system because of the years of underinvestment and neglect.
Health Minister Kwaku Agyeman-Manu has said during the event that the surest way for the government to improve healthcare delivery is to provide infrastructure.
To that end, he said the government is committed to providing the needed health infrastructure.
He said, “As you know, a healthy people guarantee a healthy nation and government being mindful of this fact has proved to show the people its commitment to improving the health status of all residents in the country.
“The surest way to improve healthcare is through providing new infrastructure or improving just existing ones across the length and breadth of the country.”
On Sunday, August 15, Information Minister Kojo Oppong Nkrumah revealed that an amount of $100million had been budgeted for the Agenda 111 project to provide 88 hospitals across the country.
He announced that the government had secured 88 sites as part of the move to construct new hospitals, adding that the titles to the parcel of lands have also been secure.
Addressing a press conference in Accra on Sunday, August 15, Mr Oppong Nkrumah, who is also a Member of Parliament of Ofoase Ayirebi, said, “The agenda 111 project which aims at providing 111 district hospitals will commence on Tuesday, August 17 2021. The project will also see to the provision of two specialised hospitals, one for the middle belt, one for the northern belt. These are psychiatric hospitals and then the redevelopment of the Accra Psychiatric hospital.
“There will also be the development of the six new regional hospitals and one extra-regional hospital for the Western region. The district hospital project, as you recall, was first announced in April 2020 by President Akufo-Addo during his 8th Covid update to the nation. It is programmed to take between twelve months to complete each one from the point of commencement. Since this announcement, the project implementation committee chaired by Chief of Staff Madam Akosua Frema Osei Opare has been delivering a number of objectives.
“One, to secure the physical location of 111 sites. Currently, they have secured 88 of those 111 sites. Not just the physical location but also securing title to the parcels of land. 88 out of 111 so far, each of these parcels is about 15 acres.
“They have also been procuring the services of consultants. The master project itself has its consultant; then, for every one of the 111 sites, like it is done in every construction project, you need the consultant and the contractors working on it; they have also been delivering on this. They have also been working to secure funding for it, and commencement funding of $100million dollars has been made available to the project through the Ghana Infrastructure Investment Fund. For the project themselves, it is budgeted US$17million for each of the district hospitals, the district and specialised hospitals are being funded by the government of Ghana.”
President Nana Akufo-Addo, in his eighth Covid-19 address to the nation last year, announced the construction of hospitals in some 88 districts across the country.
“There are 88) districts in our country without district hospitals; we have six (6) new regions without regional hospitals; we do not have five infectious disease control centres dotted across the country, and we do not have enough testing and isolation centres for diseases like COVD-19. We must do something urgently about this. That is why the government has decided to undertake a major investment in our healthcare infrastructure, the largest in our history. We will, this year, begin constructing 88 hospitals in the districts without hospitals,” he said.
President Akufo-Addo also reiterated the government’s plans of building regional hospitals in the six new regions to boost healthcare delivery in the country.
“Each of them will be a quality, standard-design, one hundred bed hospital, with accommodation for doctors, nurses and other health workers, and the intention is to complete them within a year. We have also put in place plans for the construction of six new regional hospitals in the six new regions and the rehabilitation of the Effia Nkwanta Hospital in Sekondi, which is the regional hospital of the Western Region.”
Infectious disease control centers
Additionally, President Akufo-Addo gave an indication that work will soon commence on three infectious disease control centres for each of the zones of the country to improve Ghana’s testing capacities with regard to contagious illnesses.
“We are going to beef up our existing laboratories and establish new ones across every region for testing. We will establish three infectious disease control centres for each of the zones of our country, i.e. Coastal, Middle Belt and Northern, with the overall objective of setting up a Ghana Centre for Disease Control. The recent, tragic CSM outbreak, with over 40 deaths, has reaffirmed the need for ready access to such infectious disease control centres, even though, in our time, nobody should die of the disease.”