20% of Ghana’s budget lost through corruption annually – CHRAJ

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Deputy Commissioner of CHRAJ, Richard QuasonDeputy Commissioner of CHRAJ, Richard Quason

In 2018, it was reported that the Commission on Human Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ) had stated that a total of 20 percent of the country’s budget had been lost through corruption.

The Deputy Commissioner of CHRAJ, Richard Quayson, explained that years of corruption in the country had contributed to this figure.

All these, he added, have stifled the progress of development in the country.

He made this known during a stakeholders’ sensitization forum on corruption reporting format to solicit the support of stakeholders for the National Anti-corruption Action Plan (NACAP) in Cape Coast.

The story was first published by thepublisheronline.com.

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The amount represents over 300 percent of all the aid Ghana receives yearly, and it translates into 25 percent of the 2016 annual budget estimate for foreign aids.

Mr. Richard Quason, Deputy Commissioner of CHRAJ, made this known at a stakeholders’ sensitization forum on corruption reporting format to solicit the support of stakeholders for the National Anti-corruption Action Plan (NACAP) in Cape Coast.

He said the consequences of grand corruption has festered for years, affecting the quality delivery of services by institutions, and stifled the pace of national development.

An African Union report on corruption in year 2012, revealed that more than 148 billion dollars is lost to corruption every year, and the amount are funds meant for projects, programmes and policies, but were diverted into private pockets of corrupt public officials, while the poor and the needy continue to suffer, impeding the continent’s progress in the process.

Mr. Quayson called on all stakeholders to employ all the necessary mechanisms to detect, prevent or help eradicate corruption and its related offences in public and private sectors in the country.

He said without a change of laws, attitudes and mentality on the part of the people to defeat the menace, it would be very difficult to achieve the objectives of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) for unimpeded access to education, health and information.

The Deputy Commissioner of CHRAJ urged Ghanaians to change the habit of seeing corruption as normal and develop a strong abhorrence for it.

He mentioned public cynicism, apathy towards corruption, limited awareness on the impact of corruption on fundamental human rights, weak political will and politicization of corruption cases, and weak public financial management systems as some of the setbacks in the fight against the canker.

The rest of the issues are: limited investigative journalism; weak enforcement of legislation; weak assets declaration regime; limited attention to gender in anti-corruption programme; unregulated discretion in the use of public authority and international The Commission on Human Rights and Administrative cooperation.

Mrs. Mary Adda, Programmes Manager for Ghana Integrity Initiative (GII), said the anti-corruption agency and partners through NACAP, was addressing issues relating to the public’s seeming acceptance of corruption and the linkage between human rights and corruption.

She said the main objective of any corruption prevention strategy was to reduce the opportunity for, and occurrence of corruption, adding that “the public refusal to engage in corrupt practices through increased awareness creation was the way to end it.”

Mrs. Adda said her organisation will continue to work to ensure that anti-corruption measures were put in place for under-resourced anti-corruption agencies and independent governance institutions; and weak coordination and collaboration among anti-corruption agencies are addressed.

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