Posted on:
www.dailyguideghana.com
By William Yaw
Owusu & Vincent Kubi, Tema
Tuesday, January
24, 2017
Director General
of the Ghana Ports and Harbours Authority (GPHA), Richard A-Y Anamoo, has been
relieved of his post by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo.
The termination of
his appointment was communicated to him through the Minister-designate for
Transport, Kwaku Ofori Asiamah yesterday.
The communication
asked him to cease to act as Director General of the GPHA not later than 5 pm
on January 23, 2017.
Contract Extension
The Director General
attained 60 years in October 2016 but his contract was extended by two years by
former President John Mahama.
A source at the
GPHA head office in Tema confirmed to DAILY
GUIDE that Mr. Anamoo had been asked to step aside and hand over to the Minister
of Transport-designate; and he reportedly left the office yesterday before
noon.
Junior Staff Agitation
Mr. Anamoo has
come under intense pressure from the GPHA Junior Staff Union, led by its Tema secretary,
Keku Armoquasi Amuzuah, who alleged that there were too many shady deals and
massive corruption at both Tema and the Takoradi ports.
The union had
appealed passionately to President Akufo-Addo to take swift action to restore
sanity.
Fiery Encounter
Last week, a press
conference organized by some of the agitated junior staff executives in Tema to
throw more light on the purported corruption at the ports was nearly marred by
some workers believed to be in the good books of the outgone Director General.
The workers, led
by Isaac Klu, a former chairman of GPHA Junior Staff Union and Felix Nartey
alias Ashaiman, also former executive of the union, forcibly entered the
premises to disrupt the press confab, claiming that their colleagues were
damaging the reputation of the Director General.
John Aseph, who is
the chairman of GPHA Senior Staff Union with support from Emmanuel Neequaye, chairman
of the junior staff union, openly condemned the organisers of the press
conference and said that the management was going to ‘deal’ with all those
involved.
DAILY GUIDE learnt subsequently that the aggrieved
leaders started receiving queries for going to the media with GHPA issues.
Massive Corruption
At the press briefing
jointly addressed by Mr. Amuzuah and Maxwell K. Cudjoe, who are the secretaries
for Tema and Takoradi unions respectively, the junior unions recounted how their
boss allowed himself to be “entrenched in unprecedented levels of corruption,
nepotism and cronyism.”
They highlighted issues,
including award of contracts, recruitments, discrimination in the promotion of
workers, harassment of workers perceived to be against the outgone NDC,
renovation of GPHA facilities, GPHA money allegedly used for NDC campaign, port
expansion projects, as well as sudden renewal of contracts against the rules of
the authority.
Feasibility Studies
Mr. Amuzuah claimed GPHA committed a whopping GH¢100 million into
feasibility studies towards the ports expansion projects prior to securing the
$1.5 billion for the Tema Port, and added that the management allegedly spent
GH¢81 million to renovate the old headquarters blocks; but just under a year,
the renovated blocks are in bad shape.
The union said that GPHA bought IT software for $20 million but it (software)
could not fit into the system and was eventually discarded, although the
management sent 116 staff to India to train them on how to use the software.
According to Mr.
Amuzuah, “The Director General supervised sole-sourcing for the procurement of
most equipment - both heavy and light duty - including marine crafts, some of
these equipment and crafts purchased arrived mal-functional.”
He said that
during the December 7 general election about 325 staff of the GPHA were
transported to the Brong-Ahafo and the three Northern Regions to cast their
ballots and all expenses were borne by the authority.
Mass Promotion
According to the union secretary, just after the elections, the GPHA
management promoted 1,500 out of 2,913 staff to various levels and those mostly
promoted to senior positions were NDC sympathizers, and employed about 458
people for the Tema port alone.
He claimed 63 of the new recruits were given top jobs while at the
Takoradi Port, 250 people had been employed as security guards with another 80
for other departments.
“And these decisions had been taken in spite of caution from the
various unions that the action was a breach of the Collective Bargaining Agreement,”
he disclosed.
Mr. Amuzuah said that the management had renewed cleaning services
contracts for all pro-NDC companies, some of which were against the rules of
the GPHA and also said contract sums had been inflated.
Music Studio
He also alleged that since 2012, the GPHA’s official residence of
the Director General had been converted into a movie and music studio by his
son, adding, “He uses our craft in shooting movies for a number of musicians
without paying for the services GPHA renders him.”
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