Deputy Chief of Staff, Mr Abu Jinapor
Deputy Chief of Staff, Mr Abu Jinapor

Govt defends GH¢26,300.20 spending on funeral donations

Government has defended its spending of GH¢26,300.20 as donations to funeral ceremonies as captured in the Office of the Chief of Staff expenditure submitted to Parliament on Thursday. 

In an interview on Accra-based radio station, Joy FM, the Deputy Chief of Staff, Mr Abu Jinapor, said considering the country’s cultural norms, the government cannot ignore supporting and donating at funerals. 

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“There are lots of funerals that the state intervenes...for instance the former Secretary-General of the UN, Kofi Annan, former Vice President, some astute public servants, some people who spent their whole adult life serving the state in public or civil service...I have sadly been around where very hardworking staff have either passed away and the Office deems it appropriate to make a donation to motivate workers...” he said.

The figures submitted to Parliament by the Office of the Chief of Staff on Thursday to account for its spending from January to September 2019 indicated that the Office of Government’s machinery spent GH¢1.9 million on refreshments, about GH¢63 million on foreign travels and GH¢10,930 for school fees.

Raising concerns over the nature of spending, the Minority Spokesperson on Finance, Mr Cassiel Ato Forson, described the figures as extravagant.

“This spending is something that we don’t have to encourage. I strongly believe that the time has come for Ghanaians to demand accountability from the Office of the President in terms of the expenditure that goes on there,” Mr Ato Forson said in an interview on Accra-based radio station, Citi FM on Thursday.

But Mr Jinapor has dispelled the Minority in Parliament’s concern that the Presidency was reckless in its expenditure this year.

He said the Finance Committee of Parliament, which has a representative from the Minority, interrogated the budget that the Office of the Chief of Staff submitted to it before approval.

“We need to have a national conversation about this...don’t forget we have to situate it within the cultural and traditional setting. In other countries, it's different. There have been some expenditure which has been part and parcel of our public exchequer for many years which if we put out here some people may find it scandalous,” he said.

He said if such expenses were considered in the country’s social context, it would be difficult to do away with henceforth.

“Funeral expenses in particular, in our country, there are certain funerals like those prominent chiefs where the President is invited and he attends and cannot go without giving something for funeral contribution (‘nsawa’, as the Akans call it) or gives something small like GH¢500, you can imagine the uproar,” he said.

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