Posted on: www.dailyguideghana.com
By
William Yaw Owusu
Friday, August 22, 2014
The Sole-Commissioner tasked to investigate the
payment of judgement debts has taken a swipe at the various professional
associations for their persistent strike actions which he said was affecting
the country’s development.
“Everybody gets up and wants to embark on a strike
action. There is too much indiscipline in this country. They do it and still
get their monthly salaries. Look at what POTAG and others are doing. I think
the government should look at a law that would freeze the salaries of striking
workers,” he said.
Justice Yaw Apau of the Court of Appeal was speaking
at the commission’s daily sittings yesterday after the Acting Executive
Secretary of National Labour Commission (NLC) had testified on how state institutions
were treating the labour arbitrator with utmost contempt.
Testifying in the case in which two Ghana Health
Service (GHS) staff had petitioned the commission because they claim they were
denied CAP 30 pension, the Acting Executive Secretary Bernice Welbeck lamented
how officials from the Ministries Departments and Agencies (MDAs) are snubbing
the constitutional body mandated to handle labour disputes.
“The private companies are cooperating with us,” she
told the commission, “but majority of the MDAs don’t honour our invitations.”
She said for instance that the Director-General of
the GHS has refused to come for arbitration in the case of the two staff Agnes
Tawiah and Seth Adzah who want the health authorities to pay their pension
under Chapter 30 of the 1950 British Colonial Ordinances (Pension Ordinance No.
42), popularly known as CAP 30.
Although the ministry insisted that the
petitioners had already received pensions under the Social Security and
National Insurance Trust (SSNIT) Pension Scheme and were not entitled to any
further payment, Mrs Welbeck said the GHS’s contribution would have helped the
NLC to come out with the truth.
“We intend to summarily determine the
case having given the GHS the opportunity to rebut the plaintiff’s claim,” she said.
She also told the commission how the
government is losing huge sums due to the lack of cooperation from the MDAs.
The testimony incensed Justice Apau when he said “in
Ghana, it is the educated people who are sinking this country. It is not the
farmer or the poor market woman…it is the educated people who mostly enjoy
government scholarship who are hurting the country.”
Later Asakkua
Agambila Executive Secretary of Divestiture Implementation Committee (DIC) also
testified in the divestiture of Gihoc Pharmaceuticals to Phyto-Riker Pharmaceuticals Inc and turned into
Phyto-Riker (GIHOC) Pharmaceuticals Ltd in 1998.
He said there was a valid lease of
the land in Dome, Accra to the investor and said a court once ruled that the
land was legally acquired by the government before admitting that there were
times he heard about encroachments on the land.
Kwesi Kobea Bentsi-Enchil, Chief
Valuer in chager of Compensation Schedule at the Land Valuation Division also testified
in the Gihoc case and said the government had acquired a total of 103.07 acres
of land under E.I. 81 and E.I. 48 respectively for the project.
David Agbale, of the Legal
Department at the Ministry of Finance told the commission that the ministry was
yet to come across the payment request it made in the Gihoc transaction.
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