https://www.myjoyonline.com/update-akufo-addo-ends-media-encounter-with-back-to-back-jabs-at-fuseini-pratt/-------https://www.myjoyonline.com/update-akufo-addo-ends-media-encounter-with-back-to-back-jabs-at-fuseini-pratt/

Encounter ends at 2:23 pm

The President says he has enjoyed the time and finds the forum the least stressful way to get his message out to the Ghanaians public.

He says to his political opponent Kwesi Pratt that he might turn 'Freddie' alluding to the CPP leader who crossed carpet to join the NPP and is now acting National Chairman of the NPP.

Photo: Kwesi Pratt arms folded

Adom FM Afia Pokuaa: Are we safe following incident of bugging of a minister's office?

Answer: You have to ask Inusah Fuseini whether we are safe. [Laughter erupts]

EIB Nana Aba Anamoah: Your MP Kennedy Agyapong has been very critical of the government. How do you feel about his comments and internal wranglings in the party.

Answer: NPP internal wrangling is as old as man. He is not surprised about the direction of Kennedy Agyapong's views.

EIB reporter: Is ENI under investigations after the NPP sent a letter to Italian government about the cost of the John Agyekum FPSO?

Joy FM Evans Mensah: How many jobs have you created in the last six months?

Answer: I would be surprised if I would be able to answer the question. But if you ask me in 18 months I would be in a better position to answer. We all have to be very frank. I am thinking more about private sector jobs, not the public employer.

Bawumia answers a question about the Vice-President's $14m mansion. "I have not been there. I don't think there is any work going on. It probably does not make sense to leave the project idle. We are negotiating the contract sum from the position that the quoted amount is too much," he said. 

Bloomberg Ghana reporter: How much of a blessing has the IMF program been in the context of building Ghana without aid yet you accept aid from China?

Answer: The IMF program will not be extended after it expires in 2018. There is going to be no question after the end of the IMF. We would then be on our own. He says Ghana will continue to use aid but the goal is to grow beyond aid, he corrects Bloomberg report.

Abusua FM Kwame Adinkra: likes the announcement that capitation system of healthcare will be ditched. Roads in Kumasi are in a terrible state. He praises the President's fabric.

He says government has decided to end it. But 'the when' is for the Health minister to announce.

GTV Moomen: Almost nothing has been said about free SHS today. There are concerns that there is a grade cut-off point for students seeking admission into SHS. If you don't make the grade you may not benefit. Is there any goal-post shifting going on?

Answer: No comment today because the program has been spelt out in series of public engagement. The minister will once again set out the modalities in some 10 days time. The policy is for those who are accepted in the senior high schools. There is nothing about cut-off points. Get admission, benefit from the policy - simple.

I am not a hoodwinker. I am not a con man. I am an honest person.

Insight Kwesi Pratt:[ There is laughter]  Will your government bow to Moroccan pressure to join ECOWAS despite it being a colonial power?

Answer: Ghana supports Morroco's bid to join AU. The matter to do with ECOWAS is the issue now. It has not happened before to have an application such as the Moroccan one. We will make our voice heard at the proper time.

Kencity media: Is there anything in the NIA system that will allow people to vote without moving across the country to vote during elections.

Answer: Everything about voting systems are not in my hands.

Daily Guide: I have not seen a single person prosecuted since you took office. Are you waiting for the creation of the Special Prosecutor or you are still gathering evidence.

Answer: There are a lot of allegations about people in office. If we are to go along with allegations, the courts may expose them in court as hollow. I will not accept prosecutions to satisfy political purposes but only those with strong evidence the lawyers can use to secure a conviction. There is a lot of work being done. It will see the light of day. They will not be flimsy exercises. There are several in the pipeline that I am aware of.

It is not a question of waiting for the Special Prosecutor. But making sure the cases are strong.

BBC World service: Are you not concerned about the size of your government?

Answer: He is not worried about it. The real issue of the capacity of the minister to take hold of the ministry and get it to work to improve the lives of the average Ghanaian. It is about results.

Adom FM Captain Smart: Only 31 ambulances work in this country. We are losing lives because of the lack of ambulances. What are you doing to save the situation and finally when is the Woyome money coming back.

Answer: He says the day of reckoning will come for Woyome

OMAN FM: Some Ghanaian are unhappy that appointees of the previous government are still at post.

Answer: He says those hindering his vision, obviously must leave. But for him, if you are there in the public service it is because the appointee despite his political background is working with the vision in place.

Asempa FM KABA: A lot of your critics and admirers say you are a very wild person. That wild nature about the President seems to have been fizzled out?

Answer: There is nothing wild about me. Kwesi Pratt is here. Yes, a man of strong views as small as I am. [Laughs]. If that is the idea of a wild person then it has not changed.

Photo: KABA [ Right]

Metro TV:  What is the gov't doing about open defecation and encroachment on public lands. [To summarise a long winding question]

Answer:  The President wants the Railway Development Minister, Joe Ghartey, to engage communities where railway areas have been encroached upon by residents. The attitude is not to use force.

Citi FM Bernard Avle: Gov't has gone for 1bn cedi bond. $2.5bn, $2.4bn bond to clear legacy debt, 17.4bn cedi bond totalling 40bn cedis in six months. We have borrowed almost half of our GDP. Why are we borrowing this much? Where are our internal resources?

Bawumia: Deficit was 9.4% GDP n 2016. Defict is expected to reach 6.5% GDP which brings down the debt stock. From 2012 to 2016, gov't was adding 6.5% of GDP to debt stock. After inheriting 72% of GDP to debt ratio, the government wants to bring it to under 71% in 2016.

Photo: Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia

He says the GIFMIS system is ensuring that government does not spend on projects it has not planned and budgeted for. The debt stock in terms of its impact on the economy is not increasing also because government is not borrowing domestically which would have affected interest rates. But the rates are dropping.

EIB journalist: Law schools writing exams. There is a turf war between law students and the law school. What can the President do to intervene?

A-G comes in to answer: She says judges and attorneys threatening to strike are entitled to their allowances as directed by the National Labour Commission. What was not clear was the exact increment they are asking for. We needed to ascertain the level of increases. We have been able to obtain that and we have passed that on to the Finance Minister. They are challenged by some demands.

There is only one school of law yet accreditations is given to many institutions. It is not possible to absorb a large number of LLB graduates seeking to enter law school for a professional qualification. We need to open up without sacrificing quality

Peace FM journalist: In your view what did you think you did to win a Gender champion award

Answer: I forgot to pose the same question to the AU commissioner. This is an area I want to do better. I have not been able to reach the 30% bench mark for the appointment of women in his government. He says his appointment of a first-ever female Chief of Staff could be a part. But the award is to inspire him to do more.

Question: TV3 journalist: How critical is galamsey to you especially since you have put your political career on the line?

Answer: The question provides its own answer. He says the destruction caused by illegal mining is obvious to everyone. It is simply his duty to do something about it. His alarm reached a tipping point when a chairman of a sub-committee in Cabinet Prof. Frimpong Boateng went to a meeting in Ivory Coast and returned with a message that galamsey in Ghana is affecting water supply in Ivory Coast.

He rejects threats that his fight will cost him votes in 2020. 

He apologises for the 'whinings' of his Deputy Trade Minister Ahomka Lindsay.

The President talks about some pitfalls of his government and points out stories of vandalism of vigilante groups aligned to NPP namely, Invisible Forces and Delta Force.

"I wish that voluntary groups that helped my campaign would not have gotten into trouble giving his government 'bad publicity'. He says the security agencies are dealing with the excesses and the groups have also shown remorse.

The President says the minister for sanitation is working to aggressively evacuate refuse dumps across the country starting from Accra.

He talks about the BOST saga in which 5 million litres of contaminated fuel 'spilled' into the media space for intense debate. He says a committee headed by Prof. Danquah is investigating the matter.

He talks about empowering Ghanaian businesses to expand into a 350 million West African market. "These market represent immense opportunity to bring prosperity to Ghana". This explains his trips to ECOWAS member states.

1 pm: The President has been speaking for some 20minutes.

He identifies galamsey as the headline issue in his government's six months in office. Repeats vows to stop it and assures, the fight does not target Chinese nationals believed to be the most rampant participants in illegal mining.

"The greatest challenge we face is creating jobs". He says job creation will determine his government's success.

But his brilliant Vice-President Dr Bawumia who is in charge of the Economic Management Team is capable of handling the economy.

He says, he knew the economy is Ghana's biggest challenge. "I was still shocked about the state of the economy we found," he said.

He thanks Parliament for the speed in approving his 110 ministers.

He touts his efforts as the Justice Minister who liberated the practice of journalism from the shackles of the feared criminal libel law in 2001.

After more than six months in office, President Akufo-Addo faces a barrage of questions from journalists in his first media encounter that has become an entrenched feature of Ghana's 25 years experiment with democracy.

12:30 pm The President is in his typical African print, a defensive line of ministers sit to his side and an attacking line of journalists before him ready with their questions.

Akufo-Addo media encounter

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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.