2024 Elections: GACC Launches Push for Transparency
The Ghana Anti-Corruption Coalition (GACC) has convened a pivotal forum at the Mövenpick Hotel, themed “Elections and Anti-Corruption: What Is the Next Government's Agenda?” The event, part of the Pledge Against Corruption (PAC) Campaign, seeks to elevate corruption as a central issue in the upcoming December 2024 elections.
Addressing the audience, Mrs. Beauty Emefa Narteh, Executive Secretary of GACC, underscored the neglect of corruption in Ghana’s political discourse. Despite its deep entanglement with critical issues such as unemployment, healthcare, and infrastructure, corruption has been conspicuously absent from the top concerns raised in surveys like the Afrobarometer and the National Commission for Civic Education (NCCE) reports.
Mrs. Narteh highlighted that political party manifestos feature only 32 anti-corruption commitments, with merely four addressing enforcement of existing laws. “The conversation around elections now is bereft of prominent corruption or anti-corruption discussions,” she stated.
The PAC Campaign, a collaborative initiative involving organizations like the Africa Centre for Energy Policy (ACEP), the Ghana Integrity Initiative (GII), and the Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA), aims to secure actionable anti-corruption commitments from political aspirants. The campaign also forms part of the broader project, “An Anti-Corruption Initiative for Enhancing Governance and Accountability,” supported by the UK's Foreign, Commonwealth, and Development Office (FCDO).
Mrs. Narteh called on stakeholders, including political parties, civil society, and citizens, to collaborate in fostering a corruption-free Ghana. She emphasized that accountability and transparency must be key pillars of the next government's agenda.
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