National Communications Officer of the National Democratic Congress (NDC), Sammy Gyamfi, has called on the Attorney-General, Godfred Yeboah Dame, to withdraw a letter written to the Auditor General over the latter’s publication of the Special Audit of COVID-19 expenditures for the period of March 2020 to June 2022.
According to him, the Auditor General deserves commendation for faithfully discharging his duties and not condemnation. He revealed that only a “corrupt government that has the penchant for whitewashing acts of thievery” will be worried about the publication of Audit Reports.
“We demand that the Attorney-General, Godfred Yeboah Dame, immediately withdraws his unconstitutional and distasteful letter forthwith and cease from any further intrusion into the mandate of the Auditor-General. And we call on the Auditor-General to totally disregard the said letter of the Attorney General and treat it with utmost contempt as same is unconstitutional.”
Sammy Gyamfi
Mr Gyamfi particularly expressed the party’s worry over what he described as the latest brazen attack on the independence of the Auditor-General given the unlawful manner in which the former Auditor-General, Mr. Daniel Yao Domelovo, was hounded out of office for exposing similar corrupt activities of the government. He indicated that the Attorney-General in the said letter, among other concerns, took umbrage to the publication of the audit report which he describes as “premature”. This, he explained is because the report, in the Attorney General’s view, has not been debated by Parliament and considered by the appropriate committee of Parliament.
“The NDC condemns in no uncertain terms this ungodly interference and intrusion into the mandate of the Auditor-General by someone who ought to know better. We need not remind the Attorney-General that Article 187(7)(a) of the 1992 Constitution guarantees the independence of the Auditor-General. It explicitly provides that, the Auditor-General in the performance of his duties, is not subject to the direction or control of any person or authority.”
Sammy Gyamfi
The NDC’s communications officer stated that given the Attorney General is the principal legal advisor to the “corrupt” Akufo-Addo/Bawumia Government, he is obviously worried by the “putrefying rot” that has been uncovered by the Auditor-General regarding how COVID-19 funds were grossly misused by functionaries of the government.
However, he noted that it cannot help the fears of the Attorney-General who has to be reminded in very clear terms that, the Auditor-General’s fidelity is to the laws of this country and not him.
Consitutionality of Auditor General’s report
Justifying his stance, Mr Gyamfi revealed that the Audit Service Act, 2000 (Act 584) confers power and responsibility on the Auditor-General to carry out special audits, as has been conducted into the COVID-19 expenditures of the Akufo-Addo/Bawumia government. For the purpose of clarity, he explained that section 16 of Act 584 provides that the Auditor-General may in addition to the audit of public accounts, carry out in the public interest any necessary special audits or reviews and shall submit reports on the audits or review so undertaken to Parliament.

“It is worthy of note that, Section 23 of the Audit Service Act, 2000 (ACT 584) mandates the Auditor-General to publish reports of audits as soon as the reports have been presented to the Speaker of Parliament. Therefore, contrary to claims of the Attorney General, the publication of the Auditor General’s special Audit report on the COVID-19 expenditures of the Akufo-Addo/Bawumia government was in strict conformity with the law. As a matter of fact, the Auditor General was duty-bound to publish the said report, which is precisely what he has done.”
Sammy Gyamfi
Mr Gyamfi emphasized that Mr Dame must understand that the Auditor-General in the performance of his duties is not subject to his legal opinions or interpretation of the law. He highlighted that his contention that the Auditor General has to wait for Parliament to enquire or debate audit reports he submits to the house before same is published is totally baseless and not borne out of the Constitution or any law in force in Ghana.
“It must be emphasized that, the age-long practice of publication of audit reports by the Auditor General is a legal imperative and conforms with the principles of probity, transparency and accountability that underpin the 1992 Constitution. Indeed, it is through such publications that the good people of Ghana, in whom sovereignty resides, are able to appreciate discussions and debates on audit reports by their representatives in Parliament.”
Sammy Gyamfi
To ensure the independence of the Auditor General, Mr Gyamfi called on Civil Society Organizations, the media, moral society and all well-meaning Ghanaians to rise up and condemn the “assault” on the independence of the Auditor-General by the Attorney General.
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