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GYEEDA SCANDAL: MP to present a Bill to prohibit sole sourcing

By Clement Edward Kumsah
GYEEDE- MahamaAyariga_to_peopose_a_bill
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After the conviction and imprisonment of the former National Coordinator of GYEEDA, Abuga Pele, Member of Parliament for Bawku Central, Mahama Ayariga is appealing for the removal of sole sourcing from the Procurement Act in order to address corruption in Ghana.

According to Mahama Ayariga, Abuga Pele and Philip Assibit were convicted and imprisoned because we operated a legal regime that left cracks that became the holes that devoured them. The cracks include the tolerance of unfettered discretionary power in the management of our public affairs and the permissiveness of sole sourcing and other negative practices of allowing institutions to exist without an appropriate legal framework.

Abuga Pele and Philip Assibit, were given a combined jail-term of 18 years on various counts, including willfully causing financial loss to the state.

In the GYEEDA scandal, some companies including Zoomlion Ghana Limited, RLG, Asongtaba Cottage Industry Limited and Better Ghana Management Services Limited, among others were contracted to render services under various modules for the GYEEDA programme.

It then materialized that huge sums of money were paid to these companies who were awarded the contracts through sole sourcing for no work done.

In an Open Letter sighted by Prime News, The Bawku lawmaker seeks to ask Parliament of Ghana to recall and examine all sole-sourced contracts to ensure Ghanaians have value for money.


Below is the full Details of Mahama Ayariga’s Open Letter.

Hon Mahama Ayariga Writes

I am here this morning to react to the decision of the High Court yesterday imprisoning my comrades and colleagues and brothers. They don’t cease to be brothers, comrades and colleagues because they have been determined to have fallen foul of the law. When comrades fall in battle you don’t give up the fight. It should spur you to fight harder. So this is my response:

1. These comrades fell because we operated a legal regime that left cracks that became the holes that devoured them. The cracks include the tolerance of unfettered discretionary power in the management of our public affairs and the permissiveness of sole sourcing and other negative practices of allowing institutions to exist without an appropriate legal framework... I will, therefore, take the following specific actions:

(a) Next week I will present a Private Members Bill to Parliament proposing the amendment of the Procurement Act to prohibit sole sourcing altogether. I will include in the bill a requirement that we recall and examine all sole-sourced contracts to ensure that Ghanaians have value for money.

2. I will also move against each and every single public agency or entity that is exercising unfettered discretionary power without clear non-discriminatory non-arbitrary Regulations approved by Parliament governing the exercise of their discretionary power. Specifically;

(a) I will call for the annulment of all the modules and contracts entered into by the National Youth Employment Authority that are not founded on approved regulations passed by Parliament pursuant to sections 20 and 33 of the Youth Employment Agency Act, 2015 (Act 887). This will include the annulment of all of Zoomlion’s contracts with them and fair impartial procurement of those services.

(b) I will move against the GETFund to demand that GETFund should award no student scholarships unless Regulations have been brought to Parliament to determine the criteria by which students can assess such scholarships.

(c) The Microfinance and Small Loans Center (MASLOC) must cease operating and the Minister of Finance should, on behalf of the President should bring a Bill to Parliament for the proper regulation of what they do there.

(d) I will move against the Office of the President to ensure that that Office no longer grants international scholarships to any student through the Scholarship Secretariat unless it is based on fair impartial non-discriminatory and non-arbitrary Regulations approved by the Parliament of Ghana.

(e) I will move against the Ghana School Feeding Programme and demand a termination of all the contracts by the end of this term and that the award of new contracts for school feeding should be open, transparent and accessible to all based on clear Regulations enacted by Parliament to guide the operations of the entire National School Feeding Programme.

(f) I will move against the Ministry of Education to ensure that the arrangements for implementation of the Free Senior High School Programme is governed by Regulations approved by Parliament so that all those contracts for the supply of food for freely feeding the SHS students in all the public schools are equally accessible to every Ghanaian irrespective of your political affiliation.

(g) All the activities of the district, municipal and metropolitan assemblies including the various dismissals and arbitrary appointment of revenue collectors etc must all be governed by administrative Regulations

(h) All public agencies that charge fees must be brought under control. For example, the Immigration Service and others who charged young people sums of money to process their applications have to should specifically which Legislative Instruments permitted them to collect such monies or they should return the monies the lawful owners.

I shall in the coming week write to each and every agency of Government concerned and demand that Regulations be brought to Parliament within 30 days otherwise I will proceed to the Supreme Court to seek an injunction against all that they are doing in violations of the law.

In the coming days, I will review almost all our legislation and bring on board, for similar demands for accountability. any agency which is vested with any form of discretionary power and demand similar standards from them. Let's pursue arbitrariness and sever its head from our public body.

Lastly, I will propose a private members bill that will direct the president to delegate the appointment of chief executives of public agencies to their respective boards and councils.

I am constituting a Progressive Platform and I call on all progressive forces, who are minded to join in this struggle, to rally to ensure that the project of building a fair transparent administrative state that holds every public officials accountable and treats every citizen fairly is successfully completed.

The Progressive Platform shall go round the country from community to community to mobilise support for these fundamental reforms to the way we have been running our affairs.

Let me borrow from Flt Lt Jerry Rawlings and say that you are either part of the problem or you are part of the solution. There are no neutrals in this fight.

primenewsghana.com/Ghana News