The office of the Special Prosecutor today, December 9, 2021 organised its first-ever media briefing since the assumption of office of Special Prosecutor, Kissi Agyebeng in August.
The media briefing is in observance of the International Anti-Corruption Day which is marked annually on December 9.
According to a press statement announcing the event, the Special Prosecutor noted that the programme will among other things highlight Ghana's efforts towards fighting corruption and other matters of national concern.
He added that he would elaborate on his Office's mandate to make corruption an expensive enterprise.
The programme was organised at the Kempinski Gold Coast Hotel, Accra.
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.
Latest Stories
-
Sports facilities are better managed by institutions – UG Sports Director on maintenance of Legon stadium
10 mins -
Ghanaian businesses must align vision with strategy to mitigate ESG Risks – KPMG
21 mins -
MTN achieves 30% localisation of Scancom PLC
21 mins -
Attorney-General: Some lawyers sacrifice ethics for ‘cheap’ political gains
33 mins -
Bond market: Volume up by 12.45% to GH¢746m
33 mins -
Cedi records year-to-date loss of nearly 29%; one dollar going for GH¢17.10
42 mins -
‘Our priorities are wrong in Ghana’ – UG Sports Director on sports development
42 mins -
The Fourth Estate’s investigative report wins 2nd place at 2024 AIJC
1 hour -
GPL: Our fans spur us on – GoldStars head coach Frimpong Manso on unbeaten run
2 hours -
Plantain chips are breaking hearts in Africa
2 hours -
61 new architects acquire state license to practice in Ghana
2 hours -
Masloc CEO honoured as capacity building Shero of the Year
2 hours -
MPs’ Repeated Attempts to Sue the Speaker: Unintended Consequences for the 2024 Elections?
2 hours -
Today’s front pages: Tuesday, November 5, 2024
3 hours -
Galamsey: Investigation into attack on Joy News’ Erastus Asare and colleagues already growing cold
3 hours