‘Corrupt’ DCE sacked after Audit Service exposé
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Alex Bonsu, who has been accused by an audit report conducted by the
Ghana Audit Service of indulging in corrupt practices, including
inflation of contract sums and the abuse of the Disability Fund, has
finally been booted out of office by President Mahama.
A terse statement released by the government last week announcing the
dismissal of the DCE, also named Mr. Jacob Boateng, an accountant and
Assembly Member for the Dorbor Electoral Area in the Banda District, as
having been nominated by the President to take over from Mr. Bonsu, in
accordance with Article 243(1) of the 1992 Constitution, and section 20
of the Local Government Act, Act 462 of 1993.
The Chronicle had carried several reports about the alleged corrupt
activities involving the dismissed DCE. In one of such reports, The
Chronicle quoted an audit report, which accused Mr. Alex Bonsu of
inflating contract sums and the mismanagement of the Disability Fund.
The paper again reported recently that the Member of Parliament (MP)
for Banda and Deputy Majority Chief Whip, Mr. Ahmed Ibrahim, had
bemoaned the state of corruption in the Banda District Assembly.
The Member of Parliament (MP), who was touring some communities in his
constituency to explain what has been going on in Parliament to the
people, could not hide his frustration at the rate at which the
resources of the new district were being dissipated.
“As a Member of the Legislature, I have the responsibility to ensure
that the executive arm of government makes judicious use of the
resources of this country, and will, therefore, not hide any corrupt
element anywhere,” the MP told the people. Mr. Ahmed Ibrahim said
corruption had no political colours, and that no matter who is involved,
it must be exposed.
He noted that it was not those who shield corruption who are lovers of
the party (NDC) and government, but those who come out to expose corrupt
activities like what was going on in the Banda District Assembly, led
by the District Chief Executive, Alex Bonsu.
He said since the creation of the new district, not even a single
project had been completed by the District Assembly, though the district
had received over GH¢2.1 million from the government. “The corruption
at the District Assembly is not about me, Ahmed, and the District Chief
Executive, Mr. Alex Bonsu, or any personality for that matter, but it is
at the heart of the development of the district, and the people of
Banda,” the MP said.
Ahmed said ever since the matter of financial malfeasance was exposed
by external auditors at the Assembly, he had never gone public with any
of the issues, but felt obliged to do so now. The MP said an audit
carried out at the Assembly had uncovered a series of corruption,
including inflation of contract sums on boreholes, ghost contracts, and
the misappropriation of the Disability Fund.
The Member of Parliament added that the District Chief Executive had
admitted in various meetings, including those with the Brong-Ahafo
Regional Minister, of his involvement in these corrupt activities. Mr.
Alex Bonsu told The Chronicle at the time that he would not comment on
the allegation, and that he had been advised by a minister not to make
any public comments.
The MP, however, told his constituents that all those in higher
authority who are supposed to know about the massive corruption in the
assembly had been briefed, and that he was waiting for their response.
But, before the authorities could respond, as expected by the MP, some
youth in the area, who were apparently not satisfied with the continued
stay in office of the DCE, ambushed and subjected him to severe
beatings.
Mr. Alex Bonsu was reportedly on his way from Nsawkaw in the Tain
District to his office at Banda Ahenkro, when the unidentified youth
attacked him. They also smashed the windscreen of his official Nissan
Patrol car. Still not satisfied with the punishment they meted out to
the DCE, the youth proceeded to the offices of Banda District Assembly
and vandalised Alex Bonsu’s office.
Meanwhile, a youth leader from the District, Mr. Adama Haruna, who was
very vocal on the calls on the President to dismiss the DCE, had, in an
interview with The Chronicle, expressed appreciation to the President
for listening to the people. He promised that the District Assembly
would soon meet to discuss how to retrieve the money allegedly
misappropriated by the DCE.
Mr. James Donkor, a youth from the area, said the district was created
to facilitate the development of the area, and that anybody who works
against such an agenda, should not be tolerated.
He said the level of corruption perpetuated by the former DCE should
not be tolerated in any civilised and development-oriented society. He
urged the government to show other appointees the exit, to ensure the
speedy development of the country.
[Credit: THE CHRONICLE]