Posted on:
www.dailyguideghana.com
By William Yaw
Owusu
Monday, January
30, 2017
There is an ongoing clean-up at the Ghana Cocoa Board (Cocobod) where
dismissed Chief Executive Dr. Stephen Kwabena Opuni allegedly supervised
widespread malfeasance.
Top managers at Cocobod have been asked to proceed on leave; and the
directive was reportedly issued by Minister of Food and Agriculture, Dr. Owusu
Afriyie-Akoto.
Already, President Akufo-Addo has fired Dr. Opuni, but the
government is determined to clean up both Cocobod and Cocoa Marketing Company Limited,
who have purportedly contributed to the dwindling fortunes of the cocoa sector.
Those to proceed on leave include Deputy Chief Executive (Finance &
Administration), Deputy Chief Executive (Agronomy & Quality Control), Deputy
Chief Executive (Operations) and the Director
of Finance.
The rest are Deputy Director of Finance, Deputy Director of Audit,
Director of Civil Works and the Procurement Manager.
At the Cocoa Marketing Company Ltd, the Managing Director (MD), Deputy
MD, Director Legal Services, Deputy Director and the Finance Director have
reportedly been asked to go home.
Under Opuni, workers were dismissed and transferred ‘by heart’
according to sources
Cocoa Sector
Rot
A source has already described the rot in the cocoa sector as very
‘awful,’ as people were reportedly awarded contracts without laid-down
regulations and fertilizers purportedly smuggled to neigbouring countries for
individuals’ interest.
Already, unionized workers in the cocoa industry are calling for
investigations into alleged dubious deals by the sacked CEO and his officers.
The Industrial and Commercial Workers’ Union (ICU) and the General
Agricultural Workers’ Union (GAWU) alleged that Dr. Opuni sold some of the cash
crops and kept the proceeds and according to them, such deals had cost the
country in excess of $10 million, adding that the monies could have been used
to develop the country.
Fierce Fight
Kingsley Nkansah, General Secretary of GAWU, in April last year,
disclosed at a meeting with journalists that “Thousands of tonnes of cocoa are
sold by the management of Cocobod which is hidden from the government and for
which no proper accounts are maintained either. This is known as Special Sample
Residue.”
He continued, “The Special Sample Residue is done by drawing an
average of 0.3kg of cocoa beans from each bag taken over and sold by the Cocoa
Marketing Company. So for every 1,000 tonnes of cocoa, they (management) get on
the average 4.6875 tonnes, an equivalent of 75 bags.”
No Action
The workers claimed that information on the underhand dealings at
Cocobod was passed on to the former Employment and Labour Minister, Haruna
Iddrisu, and the former Chief of Staff, Julius Debrah, as well as the former
Commissioner on Human Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ), but all to no
avail.
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