General News of Tuesday, 1 April 2025

Source: www.ghanaweb.com

Supervision gaps contribute to many abandoned projects - Ahmed Ibrahim

Ahmed Ibrahim is Minister of Local Government, Chieftaincy, and Religious Affairs Ahmed Ibrahim is Minister of Local Government, Chieftaincy, and Religious Affairs

The Minister for Local Government, Chieftaincy, and Religious Affairs, Ahmed Ibrahim, has called for stringent measures to monitor government-funded projects to help reduce the high number of abandoned projects.

Speaking on State of Affairs with Joshua Kodjo Mensah on GhOne TV, he said Ghana currently has over 2000 uncompleted projects, with the Coastal Development Authority (CODA) alone accounting for more than 700.

According to Ibrahim, many projects are left unfinished due to the lack of direct oversight from relevant authorities, noting that development agencies, which should be ensuring project completion, are not under the direct supervision of his ministry, making accountability difficult.

“The poor and abandoned projects that we have are because of non-performance… If I tell you the state of projects under the development authorities, you will cry,” he stated.

The minister noted that GETFund, which is responsible for funding educational infrastructure, struggles with monitoring projects in remote areas because its headquarters is in Accra.

“GETFund awards a contract in Zebilla, but they cannot be going there regularly to monitor,” he explained, adding that a lack of consistent supervision leads to stalled and poorly executed projects.

To address this issue, Ibrahim proposed that Members of Parliament (MPs) should take on a more active role in monitoring all GETFund projects in their constituencies, not just those they initiate.

He argued that this approach would improve accountability and ensure projects are completed on time.

“Let every MP be monitoring all the GETFund projects in their constituency and make sure they are properly done,” he said.

However, Ahmed Ibrahim also pointed to financial constraints as a key challenge in ensuring effective supervision.

He revealed that only $150,000 is allocated annually for monitoring projects across the country, an amount that translates to roughly $12,500 per month.

He stressed that this budget is insufficient to cover transportation, fuel, and multiple site visits needed for thorough inspections.

“You need to go not once, not twice… You go, inspect, come back, and report,” he explained.

VA/AE

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