Posted on: www.dailyguideghana.com
By William Yaw Owusu
Monday, 09 November 2015
The Ministry of Education (MoE)
is reportedly entering into a $40 million contract which sources say looks
bizarre and dodgy.
The contract, which is said to
have already gone to tender, is meant for the supply of English Dictionaries
for Basic Schools, with payment slated for the year 2017, even in the event that
the National Democratic Congress (NDC) administration leaves power.
The payment arrangement in the
contract has raised eyebrows as to the propriety of the entire deal.
The deal is coming on the heels
of a similar dodgy contract of $44 million for the printing of Atlases for
basic schools which debt is yet to be settled with the publishers -
Approachers.
Contradictions Galore
An open tender document prepared
last September with ITF No. MOE/DIC/ICT/01/2015, sighted by DAILY
GUIDE, showed that the NDC administration contradicted itself on how it
was going to raise the funds to pay the company that would eventually win the
bid to supply the dictionaries.
In one breadth, the document
states that the government, acting through the sector ministry, intended to
apply part of its “budgetary allocations to cover eligible payments under
contracts for the supply and distribution of English Dictionaries to Public
Basic Schools in Ghana.”
However, in another span, the
same ministry says it is the Ghana Education Trust Fund (GETFund) that is going
to be the source of funding.
A source at GETFund told DAILY
GUIDE that the Fund was not aware of any dictionary procurement.
Payment Arrangements
Even though the tender document
says budgetary allocation had been made, strangely the payment arrangement has
been done such that the first tranche is expected to be released in 2017, even
when budget for 2016 has not yet be released.
“The terms of payment shall be:
50 percent payment to be made by March 2017. Next 25 percent by August 2017 and
final 25 percent payable by November 2017,” the document indicated.
The intention to make the
payment in 2017 makes the deal look strange because a new government (whether
the president is retained in office or not) will be at the helm. No provision
for mobilisation had been made.
GETFund’s Incapability
The GETFund is already
struggling to live up to its responsibilities and is said to be saddled with
huge bills as a result of the government’s failure to make statutory payment to
the Fund; and saddling it with another huge payment would put it in further danger.
Currently, the Scholarship
Secretariat has not been able to release bursary for students on government
scholarships both in Ghana and overseas because the payment from GETFund has
reportedly delayed.
Settlement Of Dispute
If dispute arose, the document
said the purchaser and supplier were entitled to arbitration in accordance with
the provisions of the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law
(UNCITRAL) for contracts entered with foreign suppliers and those entered into
with suppliers from Ghana would have recourse to arbitration in accordance with
the laws of Ghana.
Ayariga Atlas
It will be recalled that in
2011, then Deputy Minister of Education Mahama Ayariga was embroiled in a $44
million contract for the supply of Atlases for basic schools.
The contract created furore
among the public, questions being raised about the propriety of the entire
deal.
According to inside sources, the
Ministry of Education couldn’t raise money to pay, leading to the publishers (Approachers
and others) heading to court before part of the money was paid.
The
five publishers and their allocations were: Approachers Ghana Ltd, $25 million;
EPP Books Services, $7.5 million; Winmat Publishers Ltd, $5.5 million; Adwinsa
Publishers, $5 million and Sedco Publishing Ltd, $1 million—all totalling
$43,996,000.
Unconfirmed reports say the NDC
government still owes $20.5 million to the Atlas publishers.
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