Posted on: www.dailyguideghana.com
By William Yaw Owusu
Thursday, September 29, 2016
It is becoming evident that the ruling National Democratic Congress
(NDC) is struggling to locate most of the 123 community day Senior High Schools
(SHS) that it claims to have built.
With the commencement of the 2016/2017 academic year, two leading
members of the NDC had promised to submit a list of the total number of schools
that have been completed, but had not been able to do so by the time of putting
this paper to bed.
No Show
Last week, Eric Ametor
Quarmyne, one of NDC’s leading communicators, who is on the payroll of
the collapsing National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) - even on retirement as
consultant - was on radio claiming that the NDC government has a list of all
the SHSs which have been completed and promised to furnish Peace FM – an Accra-based radio station - yesterday but when he
appeared on the ‘Morning Show’ programme, he said he could not get the list.
He said he personally went to the Ministry of Education, entered the
various units, including the outfit in-charge of projects, but nobody could retrieve
the list for him.
He, however, read out what is already in the media domain in the
course of the radio programme.
Ablakwa’s figures
Samuel Okudzeto-Ablakwa, a Deputy Minister of Education, also
promised to furnish the public with the list of the so-called 123 completed schools
when he appeared on Joy FM’s ‘News
File’ talk-show at the weekend, but up till now there has not been any communication
from him, despite promptings by those who made the requests, including Abdul
Malik Kweku Baako, editor-in chief of The
New Crusading GUIDE newspaper.
Mr Ablakwa was, however, captured in a state-owned newspaper yesterday,
saying that 42 community Day SHSs would be ready to open for admissions for the
2016/2017 academic year.
Most of the commissioned schools were the World Bank-funded ones
while the Ghana government ones are struggling for completion because of
unavailability of funds – the reason why the president cannot fulfill his campaign
promise.
He said 10 had already been inaugurated while two -Agric Nzema Day
SHS in the Ashanti Region and Nemonwora Day SHS in the Agona East District of
the Central Region- would be inaugurated very soon, adding that 30 were at
various stages of completion.
He is also quoted as saying that nine out of the remaining 30 would
be completed before September ends and the remaining 21 would be completed
before October ends.
Interestingly, on September 4, this same minister was on Citi FM saying he believed that about 70 of the schools would be ready to
admit fresh students in the current academic year, and this even contradicted President
John Mahama’s 123 schools.
This raises suspicion that in effect, only 42 schools
may be ready by the end of the year to admit students.
The Mahama administration, as a major campaign message, had
promised to construct 200 community day schools by the close of 2016.
The costs of the schools are also problematic as
contracts were awarded without funding, compelling contractors to raise money
for the projects.
Mahama’s
Admission
On September 5, President Mahama finally admitted that
he could not complete all the 200 community day schools he promised Ghanaians
in his first term in office.
He had promised that 123 schools were under construction and that
he could complete all of them before the December 7 general election,
confirming skeptics’ perception on the grandiose promise.
“In
my next term of office (from 2017), by the grace of God, we will complete all
the 200 new senior high schools that I promised. As I said, currently, 123 are
under construction, and that means that the Central Region will receive
additional secondary schools among the remaining over 70 schools that we shall
build,” he stated during the inauguration of the Abodoman Community Day Senior High
School in the Agona East District of the Central Region.
Location Issues
The locations of most of the schools are likely to cause problems
for the people the government intends to serve, leaving critics to wonder if
the whole thing was carefully thought-out before the government rolled out such
initiative.
Most of the schools are clearly isolated from the communities and
some are cited in villages where the government will find enrolment hard to
come by.
Chief of Buabinso, Nana Kwadwo Serbeh Agyemang, has even complained
about one of the schools being put up at Kyekyewere in Upper Denkyira East, describing
it as a misplaced priority for the people in the area.
He is quoted as saying that there are no adequate accommodation facilities
at Kyekyewere to contain students who come from other surrounding areas like
Tontokrom, Asaman and Ewisam.
Free SHS Agenda
The school forms part of the 200 community day institutions that
President Mahama promised to establish during his four-year term in office but
so far, less than 20 of such schools have been completed.
In June, DAILY GUIDE published that the
ambitious promise by the president was not feasible, quoting an unnamed source,
but the paper was as usual lambasted by National Democratic Congress (NDC)
communicators.
As at June, the Mahama-led government had completed and commissioned
less than 25 out of the 200 community day SHSs and the World Bank was
sponsoring 23 of the 200 with the rest being financed by the Government of
Ghana.
Reported lack of resources has conspired to rob the project of its
progress.
In the ensuing confusion, the NDC government has not yet been able
to tell Ghanaians the actual cost of each of the completed schools, not to talk
of the entire 200.
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