The disagreements and controversies surrounding gratuity payments to former presidents continue unabated as Ishmael Yamson replies his critics.
Mr Yamson, who chaired a committee that reviewed the Chinery-Hesse Committee report on emoluments for ex-presidents and parliamentarians said this is not the first time a sitting executive is reviewing the retirement package of a former president because the NPP under Kufuor did it.
He defended his committee’s observation that the CHC report was not approved by Parliament contrary to suggestions by some Members of Parliament.
Mr Yamson said although both Majority and Minority Leaders told his committee that the report was duly approved, there was no such evidence in the hansard.
He said it was therefore difficult to conclude that the report was approved.
Mr Yamson also maintained that there were two ‘final’ reports on the subject- one in June and another in December- and that the two contained significantly different recommendations.
A member of the CHC, Fred Oware had stated there was only one report, explaining that what was described as a June ‘final’ was the committee’s working document.
But Mr Yamson disagreed, emphasising he could produce a June ‘final’ report signed by Mr. Oware himself.
The IYC Chair also rejected suggestions that there are significant differences between the recommendations made by his committee and that of the CHC.
He said while the CHC recommended that all Article 71 office holders should be pensionable, the IYC rejected that. For him it is only the president and judges who cannot work after leaving office that should be pensioned and not ministers and officials. Therefore no justification, in his view, to recommend that all Article 71 office holders be pensioned.
To pension all those people, he argued, would cost the nation huge sums of money.
He also touched on tax exemptions granted former presidents on allowances and monies due them which the IYC didn’t think was reasonable and therefore quashed.
Mr Yamson asked Parliament to concede it erred in rushing to approve the CHC recommendation and accept responsibility for the lapses.
But the Minority Leader, Osei Kyei-Mensah-Bonsu disagreed with him on many of the issues.
On the issue of the hansard not containing evidence of approval of the CHC recommendations, he said the approval was done in a close sitting.
In such meetings, discussions and transactions are not covered in the hansard.
Mr Kyei-Mensah-Bonsu said “Parliament is a master of its own rules” and described as unfortunate the president’s decision to appoint a committee outside Parliament to review a decision taken by the House.
Story by Malik Abass Daabu/Myjoyonline.com/Ghana
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
Latest Stories
-
‘You have supervised Ghana’s worst spell in 5 years, just step down’ – Veronica Commey to GFA president”
20 mins -
‘Emotions will be for the end’ – Nadal
1 hour -
NYC politicians call on Whoopi Goldberg to apologize for saying bakery denied order over politics
1 hour -
Mali wins $160m in gold mining dispute after detaining British businessman
2 hours -
Bawumia: From political outsider to Ghana’s ‘Mr Digital’
2 hours -
What is Payments Tokenisation?
2 hours -
South Africa’s MTN exploring partnerships with satellite-internet providers
2 hours -
Senegal’s president faces budget challenge after likely parliamentary win
2 hours -
Plastic waste chokes Congo dam, causing widespread power cuts
2 hours -
Nigeria begins delayed mpox vaccination programme
2 hours -
Nigeria and India agree deeper ties in maritime security, counter-terrorism
3 hours -
From Awareness to Action: Hijaz Islamic School students trained on Gender-Based Violence
3 hours -
TikToker jailed for 32 months for insulting Uganda’s president
3 hours -
Moscow warns the US over allowing Ukraine to hit Russian soil with longer-range weapons
3 hours -
Gabon approves law allowing junta leader to contest elections
3 hours