Search Results for “Prof Kwesi Botchwey ” – Adomonline.com https://www.adomonline.com Your comprehensive news portal Mon, 20 Apr 2026 10:22:32 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 https://www.adomonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/cropped-Adomonline140-32x32.png Search Results for “Prof Kwesi Botchwey ” – Adomonline.com https://www.adomonline.com 32 32 What 8 years in the wilderness thought me about business in Ghana https://www.adomonline.com/what-8-years-in-the-wilderness-thought-me-about-business-in-ghana/ Mon, 20 Apr 2026 10:22:31 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=2653472 It is now widely accepted that African countries, like those in the West, the Gulf and Asia, cannot solve their developmental challenges without strong collaboration with a robust and resilient private sector.

Globally, entrepreneurs create jobs, finance infrastructure through taxes and fees, and deliver practical solutions to local problems. Yet in many Africa countries, private sector development has benefited mostly privileged foreign firms, who are often backed by their home governments, while local entrepreneurs struggle with limited support, unfair competition and regulatory hostility.

In some cases, governments turn openly against their own businesspeople in a sad spectacle that was almost being normalized across our country.

More heartbreaking is the basis for those hostilities. They are often rooted in suspicions of political differences and ties to adversaries, resulting in years of sweat and budding ideas being grounded or destroyed, using the state’s mighty power. In every practical sense, I have, sadly lived this experience in recent years.

For those who know me, it is clear I did not begin my business journey in cozy offices. For brevity, it is fair to say I began in the buzzling Nima Market in Accra, trading rice, sugar and cooking oil during which I played every role there is to help sustain the business. I offloaded rice, helped manual trucks cart them to market women traders, some of whom still remember it and jokingly describe me in those hustles, and also acted as accountant, driver and CEO all put together.

Back in those days, I was just an ordinary person trading ordinary goods for ordinary people. Those early years shaped my outlook, which, as you will see later, became handy when adversity came roaring about nine or so years ago.

From opportunity to ambition
Trade teaches discipline in a way life and classrooms can sometimes fail to. It teaches money movement, trust, and resilience. From the Nima Market, the opportunities had grown into ambition, strengthening my belief that indigenous resources, if properly governed, could build institutions that would outlast individuals.

With support from fellow committed partners, the belief and ambition started translating into investments across media, finance, education, manufacturing and services.

Every business created increased the number of jobs available to our compatriots, taking more families out of a scorching unemployment market and giving them hope. Of course, taxes were paid and expansion plans were drawn.

Burning my dreams
By 2015–2017, growth felt natural, if not inevitable. Like many Ghanaians with the country at heart, I believed that operating within the law, strengthening governance, and committing capital locally were enough to guarantee protection and continuity.

But time soon showed me that I was wrong, totally!

From 2017 through 2024, my businesses entered a prolonged period of contraction. Growth was grounded and existing operations weakened and we were forced to switch from momentum to survival.

Over time, the monetary losses turned into watching my years of disciplined effort, sweat and dreams break under forces that were sudden but overwhelming.

One moment captured the cruelty of that period. Class FM, part of a media platform that hosted our multiple stations and sustained dozens of livelihoods, was destroyed by fire.

Reflecting on that incident, I now feel it was more than a building that burned. It was an attempt to incinerate a voice and its trust and ultimately erase the moments and dreams of a humble boy from the dusty patches of the rocky Upper East Region.

Separately, I was subjected to prolonged prosecution and persecution. For almost eight years, my life was reduced to the courtroom. From Monday to Friday, I reported to court from 8 a.m. until sunset, under constant threat of warrants if I faltered. My entrepreneurship dream, which requires presence and guidance was replaced by legal survival, ultimately crumbling my businesses.

Heritage Bank’s take down
There was also the collapse of Heritage Bank Limited, perhaps the most significant one, to many readers.
Heritage was a licensed, operating bank with staff, depositors, assets and obligations with astute people heading it. The venerable Prof Kwesi Botchwey as Chairman, using his years of experience as finance minister among others to steer affairs.

The bank was solvent and resilient, as Bank of Ghana reports confirmed and a plan to make it a tech-driven consumer centered bank was in full plan. Then the Bank of Ghana pulled the plug, shocking us and all fair-minded people. Meanwhile, other indigenous banks in distress were supported finally to stand alone or guided to merge.

Obnoxious ‘not fit and proper’ tag
In revoking Heritage’s licence, BoG designated me as “not fit and proper,” in their wild search for basis to back the rather targeted action.

That label had sweeping consequences on me. Banks immediately closed my personal and corporate accounts, effectively locking me out of the formal financial system, the structure I was aiming to help better. With one regulatory stroke, I was rendered financially untouchable. I was unable to transact, operate, and function as a normal businessperson.

The obnoxious tag quickly spread beyond banking, as company registrations were blocked on grounds of alleged non-compliance. Opening new bank accounts became impossible. In official circles, I was increasingly portrayed not as an entrepreneur in distress, but as a risk and branded a danger to the very financial sector I had spent years helping to build.

Inequality in business
Heritage’s assets were later auctioned and properties, including branches acquired, refurbished and equipped with millions of cedis, were abandoned. Some of those buildings remain vacant and deteriorating to this day, serving as silent monuments to how politics destroys value rather than preserving it.

From where I stood, the treatment felt unequal. And as I have said before, when inequality enters regulation, confidence exits the system.

What is often missing in conversations about business failure is the human cost. Businesses are not abstractions but institutions filled by humans – workers whose dreams and hopes depend on the survival of the business. When they collapse, lives are shattered and those affected will have to hope a miracle comes up.

Lessons and picking up the pieces
For seven years, I watched people who trusted my leadership struggle with uncertainty they did not create. That weight stays and can sometimes be haunting.

But it teaches lessons. I learned that optimism does not replace sustenance, and that legality and compliance alone does not guarantee protection in our society. For indigenous businesses, rules may exist but their application can be selective and I also learned that resilience is not about quick recovery, but about enduring without surrendering your values and life goals.

To young entrepreneurs, I advise you build with resilience, not bravado. Document everything and prepare emotionally for reversals, because in our environment, shocks often arrive without warning. To the political class, business has no party colors. When companies collapse, families face the high possibility of life without a decent meal, lifesaving drugs and relevant educations for kids – the future of Ghana.

But I do not regret building. I regret only the innocence with which I assumed that good faith was permanent and reciprocal.

And so I wrote this not written in anger. I wrote it in memory of the system that created to suppress ideas, not support them as is the primary objective of governments.

Like air, life roles fizzle out but the consequences of our actions remain and endure . Power must be exercised with discretion and absolute commitment to the true interest of the state.

And if there is a message for policymakers from my experience, it is that business confidence is fragile. Indigenous enterprise should not become collateral damage in the exercise of authority.

For when one business is weakened unfairly, the many youngsters question why they should stay and potentially become the next victims.

Fortunately, I am still standing, believing in Ghana and hoping to pick up the pieces.

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Party base, not floating voters, holds the key to electoral victory – Akwasi Nsiah https://www.adomonline.com/party-base-not-floating-voters-holds-the-key-to-electoral-victory-akwasi-nsiah/ Sun, 11 Jan 2026 11:45:26 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=2617860 Over the years, I have come to a firm realisation about Ghana’s electoral dynamics: once a political party is able to govern effectively and satisfy its core support base, it stands a very strong chance of winning a general election.

The reality is that the majority of registered voters in Ghana are politically aligned. Only a relatively small fraction can genuinely be described as floating or undecided voters.

This position is informed not only by observation but also by direct engagement with key political actors and thinkers. I was privileged to be the first, if not the only, broadcaster to interview the late Professor Kwesi Botchwey after the committee he chaired presented its findings on the factors that led to the National Democratic Congress (NDC) losing the 2016 general election to the New Patriotic Party (NPP).

During his appearance on my programme on Kasapa FM, Professor Botchwey was emphatic in his assessment. He stated clearly that the NDC’s core supporters were deeply unhappy with how party faithful were treated while the party was in power. That dissatisfaction within the base, he explained, significantly contributed to the party’s defeat.

Fast forward to recent events, and similar sentiments are now being expressed in attempts to explain why the NPP also suffered a heavy defeat at the hands of the NDC. The recurring thread in these electoral outcomes is strikingly consistent: greed, complacency, and neglect of party supporters once political power is secured.

Both the NPP and the NDC must therefore guard against self-deception. There is no vast or mysterious pool of undecided voters waiting to swing elections at the last minute. Electoral victories in Ghana are largely determined by how well political parties manage, respect, and sustain their own support bases.

Political parties must be more deliberate and intentional in ensuring that their supporters feel valued, included, and catered for. Doing so places them just an inch away from electoral victory.

It is also crucial to recognise that party supporters are not necessarily blind loyalists. Many are discerning and engage in critical assessment of their own party’s performance while in government. When disappointed, such supporters may either vote against their party or abstain entirely from the electoral process.

In the end, elections are not lost or won merely in swing regions or among floating voters; they are often decided at home, within a party’s own support base. How that base is treated while in power may ultimately determine a party’s political future.

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Kwame Ahwoi’s Working With Rawlings – Martin Amidu’s critique VIII (Part I) https://www.adomonline.com/kwame-ahwois-working-with-rawlings-martin-amidus-critique-viii-part-i/ Fri, 19 May 2023 13:59:44 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=2251411 This critique is the beginning of the concluding series of critiques of the author’s narrative on the second and last tenure of President Rawlings under the 1992 Constitution. This series will deal with the narratives of the author about the succession to President Rawlings within the NDC and the problems it engendered. It will include the true facts contradicting the author’s fabricated narrative of the circumstance under which a bait was dangled before Martin Amidu who swallowed it to become Professor Mills’ running mate for the 2000 presidential elections. I start in this instalment with the narrative on the award of the Officer of the Volta, and what the author styles the two governance aberrations. 

OFFICER OF THE VOLTA (OV) 

The author’s narrative, at pages 129 and 130 of Working with Rawlings, of how he came to be awarded the Officer of the Volta (OV) by the Government of Ghana leaves one with the distinct impression that the award was intended as a ploy by Captain (Rtd.) Kojo Tsikata and President Rawlings to keep him within the Government of NDC 2. The occasion of the National Honours Award was merely used by President Rawlings to get the author to rescind his decision to leave front-line politics and not to continue as a Minister in his second term as President as the author himself noted – “in the euphoria of the moment .…and the solemnity of the occasion”. 

But as Mr. Johnson Asiedu Nketia, the General Secretary of the NDC, was reported by Ghana Web to have said on Monday, 30 June 2005 on the occasion of President Kufour crowning himself as part of the impending National Honours Award ceremony: “…while celebrating distinguished service worthy of recognition and [it] is expected to be conferred on principles rather than political convenience.” Surely, to confer the Officer of the Volta just to dissuade any person not to leave front-line politics in any Government is a core example of “political convenience” and not one “conferred on principles”. Mr Asiedu Nketia was speaking in 2005 after prominent NDC awardees, including President Rawlings and Captain Kojo Tsikata, had turned down Mr Kufour’s offer of national awards which they perceived to have been based solely on political convenience. 

 Whatever the real reasons for the decision to award the Officer of the Volta to the author in 1997, when I heard the citation that accompanied the award I told Alhaji Mahama Iddrisu that President Rawlings had formally enrolled Kwamena Ahwoi as a lawyer on the Roll of NDC Lawyers whose name would never appear on the Roll of Lawyers of the General Legal Council of Ghana. I was convinced that the award was arranged to compensate for the author’s hurt ego of his inability to be enrolled on the Roll of Lawyers in Ghana as a lawyer. But for the indemnity provision in section 34 of the Transitional Provisions to the 1992 Constitution which indemnified unlawful administrative acts of the PNDC, the author could have been prosecuted under Section 9(2) of the Legal Professions Act, 1960 (Act 32) upon the coming into being of the 1992 Constitution for unlawful practice as a lawyer in Ghana during the regime of the PNDC. 

The PNDC knew my attitude towards awards, and commendations after the Marine Drive Arbitration in which I led the Ghana side to conclude in the United States of America. The numerous institutions that had attempted to confer awards on me also knew my aversion to such post facto recognitions as though one was performing one’s inherent duties in anticipation of somebody else’s recognition. There are several other people the world over who hold an ingrained aversion to the utility of accepting awards in alleged recognition of their unsolicited contributions to society or their nations. It partakes of trying to make a public spectacle of those contributions made out of volution and for the awarder to seek to take some credit for the achievements of the awardee. 

There is a 9 March 2012 blog, Kwame Gyan’s Blog entitled, “Making A Mockery Of National Awards” which made interesting reading for me because it was commenting on National Honours Awards which had been conferred by President Mills in 2011. This was long before the author wrote Working with Rawlings. One sentence that caught my attention stated that: “I glanced through the list of 241 who were awarded in July 2008 and it was very obvious they were largely persons who bore some relationship with the NPP….” The interested reader may just go on open source to find the 2015, and 2016 National Honours Awards lists and the reader would not fail to be stupefied to recognize that National Honours Awards had always been and continue to be mostly gifts to partisan political elites given on grounds of political convenience. But National Honours Awards had become political awards, and paid for awards, the whole world over for decades. Open source contains the abuses to which they have been put in various countries and the refusal of genuinely eminent persons to accept being pestered with them, including Nobel Awards. The unknown soldier is more celebrated than the known one. 

TWO GOVERNANCE ABERRATIONS 

The author, for purposes of his own ego, selected two events he chose to call aberrations he alleges were worth mentioning because in both situations President Rawlings and he were almost set on a collision course in the Local Government sector during the President’s second term in office. The events he selected were: “The waste management contract between City and Country Waste Limited and the Accra Metropolitan Assembly (AMA)” and “…the demolition of a newly-constructed, fully-furnished hotel owned by one Alhaji Yusif Ibrahim in the Airport area of Accra.” As the reader could expect from the beginning, these events were chosen to denigrate President Rawlings as acting undemocratically and contrary to the normal rules of procedure for the execution of government business. 

City & Country Waste Limited 

I was the Deputy Attorney General and was acquainted with the issues involved in what the author calls two governance aberrations. The waste management contract was submitted to the Attorney-General’s office from the Ministry of Local Government and Rural Development for legal opinion, and it fell under my schedule to proffer the advice for and on behalf of the Attorney-General. 

The legality of the conduct of Heads of State, and Government are measured by the quality and integrity of the Ministers they appoint and the ability of those Ministers to reason with them to the extent of the Minister being willing to tender his resignation if a disputed fundamental decision touched on matters of principle and breaches of the Constitution. The foregoing fundamental principles of public administration are reinforced by the Ministerial oath in the second schedule to the 1992 Constitution as follows: 

“…that I at all times well and truly serve the Republic of Ghana in the office of Minister of State (Deputy Minister); and that I will uphold, preserve, and protect and defend the Constitution of the Republic of Ghana as by law established; that I will, to the best of my judgment, at all times when required freely give my counsel and advice for the good management of the public affairs of the Republic of Ghana; and that I will not directly or directly reveal any matters that shall come to my knowledge in discharging my duties and committed to my secrecy as Minister of State (Deputy Minister).” 

With the above fundamental constitutional obligation imposed on the author, Kwamena Ahwoi, as the Minister for Local Government and Rural Development any reader of the narrative on “The waste management contract between City and Country Waste Limited and the Accra Metropolitan Assembly (AMA)” cannot escape the conclusion that the author failed woefully in his duties as a Minister of State when he remained at post to condone what he now terms a governance aberration attributable only to the unlawful behaviour of former President Rawlings. 

The resort to the excuse that the “…. waste management contract between a company called City and Country Waste Limited and the Accra Metropolitan Assembly (AMA) was a joint Ghanaian-Canadian venture owned partly by Mr Eddie Annan, a known NDC financier and a close friend and confidante of President Rawlings and his wife” as a means of apportioning blame for the failure of the author in his Ministerial duties to defend the Constitution is not an honourable conflict strategy or tactic. If as a sector Minister, the author was not happy about the structure of the contract between the AMA and the company his duty was “to protect and defend the Constitution of the Republic of Ghana”. As a joint Ghanian and Canadian venture to which the Government was a party, it was clearly an international economic and business transaction which the sector Minister was enjoined to submit to Parliament for approval under Article 181(5) of the 1992 Constitution: no further excuses were permissible. 

But the narrative by the author seeking to blame President Rawlings and his wife for practising cronyism is contradicted by the author’s own attempt at fabricating the facts and evidence-based entirely on suspicions. He wrote on pages 136 to 137 of Working with Rawlings that: 

“Meanwhile, I was under intense pressure from President Rawlings, who I suspect was under intense pressure from Mr Eddie Annan, to authorize the MCE of the Accra Metropolis, Nat Nunoo Amarteifio, who was later replaced by Mr Ishmael Ayittey (sic), to sign the contract. When President Rawlings realised that I would not give the authorization until I had finished with my consultations and checks, and seeing that this was going to result in considerable delay, he went behind me and directly ordered Mr Ishmael Ayittey (sic) to sign the contract. Mr Ayittey (sic)did.” 

The concluding statement that President Rawlings went behind the author as the Minister for Local Government “and directly ordered Mr. Ishmael Ayittey (sic) to sign the contract. Mr. Ayittey (sic) did” is a big, irredeemable, and unpardonable lie. First, the narrative events fabricated by the Professor of Law does not support the facts and evidence of the tenure of office of the persons he wrote about. Mr. Ishmael Ayeetey was nowhere near the AMA as its MCE when he was allegedly “…directly ordered …to sign the contract”. 

Mr. Ishmael Ayeetey was appointed the Chief Executive of the AMA in 1992 as successor to Kofi Portuphy (1991-1992). He won the 1992 elections as a Member of Parliament for the Odododiodio constituency and exited the post of Chief Executive to become a Member of Parliament on 7 January 1993. Mr. Ishmael Ayeetey was succeeded by Mr Nat Nunoo Amarteifio as MCE of the AMA from 1994 to 1998 when the contract was allegedly signed on 4 December 1997. Mr Samuel Adokwei succeeded Mr Amarteifio as the MCE from 1998 to 2001 to be replaced by Solomon Ofei Darko of the NPP (2001-2003) after the NDC lost the 2000 elections. The surnames Ayittey and Ayeetey are not interchangeable in Ga. 

The foregoing verifiable facts do not do any credit to the faculties of any person holding himself out as a Professor of Law and a former Minister for Local Government and Rural Development who wants the whole world to believe that he was competent in his Ministerial office. It is noteworthy that the author does not even have the patience and acumen required of any academic to have verified the surname of Mr. Ayeetey whom he assigned the fabricated surname of Ayittey. Understandably the author could not have had the ability to practice the profession of law as rightly determined by the UK Inns of Courts and General Legal Council of Ghana. 

Secondly, the author after having the temerity to fabricate the facts and evidence as to who signed the waste management contract under discussion followed it up with another contradictory admission that: 

“The sequel to the event was that when the NDC lost the 2000 elections and the NPP came to power in 2001, they abrogated the contract and sold the equipment to private individuals. City and Country Waste Limited sued the AMA and in the case in which I gave evidence for the company, which travelled all the way to the Supreme Court, City and Country Waste was awarded damages of about $17 million….” (Emphasis supplied). 

The reader is thus being told by the author who would not “give the authorization until I had finished with my consultations and checks,….” that he turned round to be a witness for the very “Ghanaian-Canadian venture owned partly by Mr. Eddie Annan, a known NDC financier and a close friend and confidante of President Rawlings and his wife” to which he apportioned blame to President Rawlings for the signing of the contract. The author fails or refuses to inform the reader the consideration that persuaded him to be a star witness in a contract he formed the view as the sector Minister had not met all the procedures for its execution. The author was gloating even when he had failed to comply with Article 181(5) of the 1992 Constitution to submit the international business or economic joint venture transaction to Parliament for approval despite the Attorney-General’s opinion urging him to do so. The author chose to forget that his friends and colleagues went to jail in the Aveyime Rice Transaction (called the Quality Grain case) for a similar unconstitutional conduct. 

The author knew that such an important case that had travelled to the Supreme Court from the High Court presided over by his surrogate and a reviewer of his Working with Rawlings 

would be reported in the Ghana Law Reports to which he had access as a Professor of Law. He, however, again deliberately refused to cite the case because he knew that it would provide a conscientious reader with the tools to cross-check his narrated facts from the Ghana Law Reports. The case was reported as City & Country Waste Limited v Accra Metropolitan Assembly [2007-2008] SCGLR 409, years before the author wrote and published Working with Rawlings. It was a decision given without reference to Article 181(5) of the Constitution – the lawyers call it a per incuriam judgment and unenforceable under the 1992 Constitution. This is the only plausible explanation why the enforcement of the judgment gained momentum only when the NDC returned to power in 2009. 

Mr. Justice Ofoe, now a Justice of the Court of Appeal, who was one of the editors and reviewers of Working with Rawlings, presided over the High Court which heard the case at first instance with the author as a principal witness for the City & Country Waste Limited “owned partly by Mr. Eddie Annan, a known NDC financier and a close friend and confidante of President Rawlings and his wife”. Mr. Justice Ofoe was referred to in the Supreme Court judgment as having stated in his judgment in the High Court that the contract was signed on 4 December 1997 and work was commenced on 13th July 1999 and continued until 29 June 2001 when it was terminated. How then Could Mr. Ayeetey have been ordered by President Rawlings to sign the same contract as contended by the author? 

Mr. Justice Ofoe, who did not recuse himself from the case on account of the authors deep involvement with the case, was also quoted by the Supreme Court as saying inter alia that: “…The service contract itself was signed on 4 December 1997. Between 30 July 1997 and 4 December 1997, what prevented Mr. Amarteifio from putting the matter of Garbage Collection Disposal and Land Fill Services of solid Waste before the assembly? ….” Mr. Justice Ofoe’s quoted words from the judgment demonstrates clearly that it was Mr. Amarteifio who signed the contract on 4 December 1997 and not Mr. Ayeetey. How could Mr. Justice Ofoe and the author have missed these facts when it came to reviewing and editing Working with Rawlings? The simple reason is that both author and surrogate saw the writing of Working with Rawlings as payback time to shift blame to President Rawlings. The story and residues of the Log & Lumber Limited, Kumasi, criminal convictions, and sentences which the author has left untold in Working with Rawlings might still have been operating against former President Rawlings in the writing, editing, and reviewing of Working with Rawlings. 

The author, who was the chief puppet master of President Mills before and after he assumed office on 7 January 2009 failed or refused to inform the reader of the reasons it had to take the NDC Government to return to power in 2009 to step in and get “the judgment debt liquidated under arrangements with the District Assemblies Common Fund Administrator (DACFA)” (See page 137 of his book thereof). Professor of Law, Kwamena Ahwoi knew that the judgment having been given without consideration of Article 181(5) of the 1992 Constitution was unenforceable and which was the reason the NPP Government never paid upon it. The author was also a consultant to the Ministry of Local Government at the time the judgment debt was liquidated and should have been candid with the reader as to the reasons for liquidating a debt which as a sector Minister he thought was unlawfully incurred through pressures from President Rawlings. 

I had been the Chairman of the Public Agreements Board (PAB) under PNDC Law 42 and responsible for the recommendation of all public agreements to the PNDC for consideration and approval from 1989 to 6 January 1993. I sat in PNDC meetings on account of my position as the Chairman of the PAB to speak to the recommendations and dis-recommendations of the Board. I dissuaded the enactment of a PNDC Law during the transitional period to institutionalize the PAB to be an existing body after the coming into force of the 1992 Constitution on account of the several battles I had fought with PNDC Members and Secretaries who selfishly wanted to have just any agreement approved by the PNDC. Chairman Rawlings always supported the PAB when it dis-recommended public agreements for approval by the PNDC. My experience was that Chairman Rawlings was open to objective reasoning as to why a public agreement was not in the national interest to be executed by the Government. 

It was to the credit of President Rawlings and the PAB that no PNDC operative was ever investigated, prosecuted, convicted, and sentenced for manipulation of the public procurement or contract process for private gain when the NDC lost the 2000 elections. On the contrary a number of Ministers and operatives of the NDC 1 and NDC 2 Governments who would not listen to the Attorney-General’s advice on procurement paid high prices for their indolence. 

Demolition of Hotel in Airport Area 

In the second event or alleged aberration chosen by the author, the demolition of Alhaji Yusif Ibrahim’s Hotel in the Airport area of Accra, the Attorney-General’s Office was not involved in the circumstances of the demolition. But I had known Alhaji Yusif Ibrahim for years at the Accra Polo Club since I came on transfer from the Upper East as a PNDC Deputy Secretary to the Ministry of Local Government in January 1986 through my late cousin who used to be a Chief Manager at the Agricultural Development Bank, and a member of the Accra Polo Club. 

I also knew Alhaji Ibrahim’s circle of friends within the PNDC, particularly at the Ministry of Finance, and the PNDC Secretariat. I knew Chairman Rawlings detestation of the relationship between PNDC Secretaries at the Ministry of Finance and the handling of the two signed USAID/Ghana Public Law 480 (P.L. 480) Title III program agreements with the Government of Ghana (GOG), committing A.I.D. to transfer rice and wheat to Ghana. Those commodities were to be sold by GOG through its authorized agents to eligible local dealers and facilitate programming of the local currency sales proceeds for development activities in Ghana in accordance with the Title III agreements. Alhaji Yusif Ibrahim was reputed to have been entrusted by the Ministry of Finance with aspects of the implementation of the PL 480 assisted programme. 

Chairman Rawlings had been apprehensive of the arrangements with the PL 480 agreement and the involvement of some of his trusted PNDC Secretaries in the counterpart arrangements with Alhaji Ibrahim. Cadres in the 31st December Revolution knew that Chairman Rawlings used various sources and methods in gathering intelligence about his appointees. 7 

Consequently, there was already simmering latent conflict between President Rawlings and the Minister for Finance, Dr. Kwesi Botchwey, the Deputy Minister for Finance, Paa Kwasi Amissah-Arthur, and other PNDC Secretaries whom he perceived to be friends and associates of Alhaji Yusif Ibrahim. 

When the demolition of Alhaji Yusif Ibrahim’s hotel eventually took place the cadre circles, including myself, were convinced that the direct target was not Alhaji Yusif Ibrahim but his associates who were appointees within the government and former appointees who were perceived as having some financial interest in the Hotel. The conflict issues, however, appeared to have been contested on the patent basis of the environmental consequences and the validity of permits and the site upon which the Hotel was built. 

Former President Rawlings himself stated to the Daily Graphic as published online on 5 June 2019 that he does not regret demolishing the Hotel and given another opportunity he would order the demolition of that Hotel if it was built again. He was quoted to have said that: “If time were reversible, I would do it again and again and I would take along their new gargantuan structures in the watercourses. The structures were reported by his own respectable, law-abiding neighbours.” 

Unfortunately, President Rawlings was unable to complete the book he promised Ghanaians he was writing before his untimely death on 12 November 2020, a few months after the author published his pernicious and vengeful Working with Rawlings. It is, however, important for any reader of the author’s narrative to know that there were long outstanding residues of conflict between the Chairman of the PNDC/President, and some PNDC Secretaries/Ministers, Deputy Secretaries/Ministers, and operatives from the PNDC/NDC Government Secretariat allegedly associated with Alhaji Yusif Ibrahim that gave rise to the conflict escalations that led to the demolition of the Hotel when it was built during the tenure of President Rawlings. These may constitute the untold stories of the stories told in the author’s narrative. 

President Rawlings believed after the publication of Working with Rawlings that the author knew the foregoing undercurrents to the demolition of the Hotel but refused to articulate them to reap vengeance on President Rawlings after their relationship soured. It is my duty and in the public interest to articulate his concerns as I had promised him before his demise. 

When the reading public comes someday to appreciate the stories told by the author in Working with Rawlings, the stories he has left untold, and the stories he will never tell, then the reading public will better understand the author’s pernicious motives for writing Working with Rawlings. 

Martin A. B. K. Amidu 

18 May 2023 

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Kwesi Botchwey goes home (Photos) https://www.adomonline.com/kwesi-botchwey-goes-home-photos/ Fri, 23 Dec 2022 14:02:38 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=2199054 The final funeral rites of former Finance Minister, Professor Kwesi Botchwey, has been held.

The solemn ceremony came off on Thursday, December 22, 2022, at the Forecourt of the State House.

In attendance to pay last respects were President Nana Akufo-Addo, Vice President Dr Mahamudu Bawumia, former Speakers of Parliament; Doe Adjaho and Professor Aaron Mike Ocquaye, Chief of Staff; Akosua Frema Opare and former Ministers including Hannah Tetteh.

Former President John Mahama, Professor Jane Opoku-Agyemang, National Democratic Congress (NDC) Chairman, Johnson Asiedu Nketia and other party bigwigs also joined the family to give him a befitting burial.

The late economist passed on on Saturday, November 19, 2022, aged 78.

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Mahama mourns with Prof Kwesi Botchwey’s family [Photos]

Prof Botchwey passed at the Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital where he was undergoing treatment for an undisclosed illness.

He was the longest-serving Minister of Finance and Economic Planning from 1982 to 1995 under the erstwhile late President J.J. Rawlings’ administration to assist in stabilising Ghana’s economy at the time.

Immediate past NDC Chairman, Samuel Ofosu-Ampofo, Council of State Member, E.T. Mensah, Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta, Yaw Osafo-Maafo and many others were also present.

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Meet late Professor Kwesi Botchwey’s adorable children [Photos] https://www.adomonline.com/meet-late-professor-kwesi-botchweys-adorable-children-photos/ Fri, 23 Dec 2022 10:42:19 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=2199275 It was a difficult moment for the children of late former Finance Minister, Professor Kwesi Botchwey as they buried their father.

They joined scores of mourners on Thursday, December 22, 2022, to pay their last respects to the late economist at the Forecourt of the State House.

Clad in black cloth, the two ladies and gentleman struggled with tears as they read their tribute to eulogise their late father.

The photos taken by Adomonline.com’s Joseph Nii Odotei from the funeral ground captured the Botchweys in a sombre mood.

The state event was attended by the President, ministers of state, former President John Mahama, members of the Diplomatic Corps and other dignitaries in politics, the economic community and academia, as well as members of the National Democratic Congress (NDC).

READ MORE:

Akufo-Addo mourns Kwesi Botchwey

Ghanaians mourn Prof Kwesi Botchwey

The NDC guru passed on at 78 after a short illness.

He died on Saturday, November 19, 2021, at the Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital where he was undergoing treatment.

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Akufo-Addo, Mahama, Asiedu Nketia meet at Kwesi Botchwey’s funeral (Photos) https://www.adomonline.com/akufo-addo-mahama-asiedu-nketia-meet-at-kwesi-botchweys-funeral-photos/ Thu, 22 Dec 2022 21:25:11 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=2199143 President Nana Akufo-Addo, former President John Mahama and National Democratic Congress (NDC) chairman, Johnson Asiedu Nketia, met at the funeral ceremony of the late former Finance Minister, Professor Kwesi Botchwey.

The burial service took place at the forecourt of the State House, Accra.

The state event was attended by the President, Ministers of State, former Presidents, members of the Diplomatic Corps and other dignitaries in politics, the economic community and academia, as well as members of the NDC.

Your men have turned into area boys – NDC man tells…

At the memorial service, President Akufo-Addo was seen having a chit chat with Mr Mahama and Mr Nketia.

In what happened to be a snappy yet great discussion, the two men were seen seriously engaged in a conversation.

The former President also met and spoke with Vice President Dr Mahamudu Bawumia.

Check out some photos shot by Adomonline.com’s Joseph Odotei:

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Senyo Hosi’s emotional poem tribute to Prof. Kwesi Botchwey https://www.adomonline.com/senyo-hosis-emotional-poem-tribute-to-prof-kwesi-botchwey/ Thu, 22 Dec 2022 19:00:56 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=2199305 Mentor mine,
Please turn back the hands of time.
It is the eighties with me a little boy bumping into you.
Starstruck and lost on what to do.
I just called out to you.
You smiled and called me back, “hello little man”.
Boy o boy, for this little boy, it felt good to be called some kind of Man.
This summarises you,
You knew how to woo.

Thirty years on we will connect.
Open about intent.
Debates so intense.
Knowledge so immense.
In pursuit of what for Ghana makes sense.
At your feet I learnt.
When I despair, you were hell bent
Never to have me relent.
You will argue that we never give up on Ghana no matter how hopeless it seems, for someday we shall overcome. You never hesitated to remind us that sometimes we are the change we seek.

Mentor mine,
Please turn back the hands of time.
Eighteen we have seen
With you in between.
You served the longest.
Walked through the times toughest.
Rose to the calling and passed the test.
Even when you took your rest,
When called to serve, you say yes.
Indisputably, you remain the best!
The rest, too far apart to make a contest.

Mentor mine,
Please turn back the hands of time.
When I walk onto the street, Asanfena,
I still hope to find you within the greens,
Setting up for a rendezvous.
While I enjoy my envious look at the deux chevaux.
You will uncork the finest Japanese.
Unbox the classiest Cubans.
And in perfect harmony,
We sip and puff.
Boy o boy, private and humble you may have been
But you sure had great taste and treat in between.

Mentor mine,
Please turn back the hands of time.
More than ever before Ghana needs you in this time.
You were what now should have been.
A touchstone you remain, any day.
Hard to believe, your 80th jam was just like yesterday
But today, you are gone away.

Touchstone!
At Asanfena, I wait
Please walk through the gate.

Senyo K. Hosi
December 13, 2022

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Prof Kwesi Botchwey’s funeral: Family pays courtesy call on Bagbin [Photos] https://www.adomonline.com/prof-kwesi-botchweys-funeral-family-pays-courtesy-call-on-bagbin-photos/ Thu, 22 Dec 2022 14:41:47 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=2198847 The family of the late former Minister of Finance,  Professor Kwesi Botchwey, has officially informed the Speaker of Parliament, Alban Sumana Kingsford Bagbin, about his final funeral rites.

Professor Kwesi Botchwey passed away on on November 19, 2022, after a short illness at the Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital where he was receiving treatment.

Professor Kwesi Botchwey’s family officially informs Bagbin of his passing, funeral arrangements 

According to the head of the family representatives, the burial service for the former minister will be held on Thursday, 22nd December, 2022 at the Forecourt of State House in Accra.

Professor Kwesi Botchwey’s family officially informs Bagbin of his passing, funeral arrangements 

The representatives, led by Professor Kojo Yankah, indicated to the Speaker that the funeral rites are in line with the late Professor’s final burial schedules as he wished.

Professor Kwesi Botchwey’s family officially informs Bagbin of his passing, funeral arrangements 

Speaker Bagbin lauded the late Professor Kwesi Botchwey as a distinguished statesman and an astute lawyer.

Professor Kwesi Botchwey’s family officially informs Bagbin of his passing, funeral arrangements 

Speaker Bagbin eulogized him as a man of humanity and a true Ghanaian, and assured the family representatives of his support.

Professor Kwesi Botchwey’s family officially informs Bagbin of his passing, funeral arrangements 

The late Professor Botchwey was appointed by the late President J.J. Rawlings to assist in stabilising Ghana’s economy at the time, from 1982 to 1995.

Professor Kwesi Botchwey’s family officially informs Bagbin of his passing, funeral arrangements 

Prior to his demise, he was a key member of the council of elders of the National Democratic Congress, having played an integral role in the evolution of the NDC, from its PNDC formative days.

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Speaker leads MPs to pay tribute to late Prof Kwesi Botchwey https://www.adomonline.com/speaker-leads-mps-to-pay-tribute-to-late-prof-kwesi-botchwey/ Tue, 20 Dec 2022 12:53:30 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=2198027 Speaker Alban Bagbin on Monday led Members of Parliament (MPs) to pay tribute to the late Professor Kwesi Botchwey, former Finance Minister, for his invaluable service to the nation, which spanned from 1882 to 1995. 

Prof. Botchway passed-on on November 19, 2022, at the Korle Bu Teaching Hospital in Accra, after a short illness at the age of 80. 

His funeral is slated for Thursday, December 22, 2022. 

The Speaker, who led the House to observe a minute silence in honour of the late Professor Botchwey, described him as a distinguished statesman. 

Mr Bagbin said he was a student of the late Prof Botchwey at the Law Faculty of the University of Ghana in the 1970s, when he was lecturing there. 

“And it is some of them who inspired us to where we are. He has a sharp brain, he was flashy…and a man who was a true Ghanaian,” the Speaker said. 

He noted that the late Prof. Botchwey spoke so many languages that he was always at home with everybody. 

“We will have, as a House (to) find space to celebrate more of such great Ghanaians to bring home to our people that, this is a great nation, made up of great men and women.” 

He said Prof. Botchwey’s demise was a shocking departure but at least he celebrated his 80th birthday. 

Mr Haruna Iddrisu, the Minority Leader in Parliament, and the National Democratic Congress (NDC) MP for Tamale South, who was the first to deliver his tribute in honour of the late Prof. Botchwey, described him as a great intellectual and a statesman in the league of great Ghanaians, who had contributed to lifting the image of the country. 

The Minority Leader said the late Prof. Botchway was an outstanding scholar and academic, an outstanding legal luminary and an outstanding statesman; saying, “he simply was an adorable politician and a political mentor to me personally. I am an ardent mentee of Prof Kwesi Botchway.

“Mr Speaker, his contribution to Ghana’s economic development as one of the longest serving Ministers of Finance, is more visible than any other.” 

He noted that the late Prof Botchwey was a simple man, who inspired many with his uncharacteristic humility. 

Mr Joseph Osei-Owusu, the First Deputy Speaker and the New Patriotic Party (NPP) MP for Bekwai, in contributing to the statement said Ghanaians would remember the late Prof Botchwey for introducing the Programme of Action to Mitigate the Social Costs of Adjustment (PAMSCAD) and the Structural Adjustment Programme.

He said throughout the late Prof. Botchwey’s leadership of the Finance and Economic Planning committee, he would also be remembered for his strength and the communication skills with which he defended his economic policies. 

Mr Alexander Afenyo-Markin, the Deputy Majority Leader and NPP MP for Efutu, eulogized the late Prof. Botchwey for bringing his expertise to bare on the economy of Ghana. 

He noted that the late Prof. Botchwey took the country through very challenging times; declaring that “Mr Speaker, the man led the implementation of the Economic Recovery Programme (ERP) Phase One, Two and Three and PAMSCAD.” 

Mr Kojo Oppong Nkrumah, the Minister of Information and NPP MP for Ofoase-Ayirebi, in his contribution also eulogized the late former Finance Minister for stabilizing Ghana’s economy and building upon it. 

“Mr Speaker, some of the most difficult period of our economic history, Prof. Botchwey was the man responsible for fiscal policies and key among the things that he was responsible for ensuring the successes were revenue measures, some of which were not popular with the people of Ghana at the time that he was introducing them. But over the years, I think many will agree that his service to this Republic is one that ought to be celebrated,” he stated. 

Mr Emmanuel Armah Kofi Buah, the NDC MP for Ellembelle, said the late Prof. Botchwey was a very diligent and friendly man, who spoke his mind and that he supported the development efforts of the nation. 

He noted that the late Prof. Botchwey held the view that politics must not be divisive; saying “I think on a day-by-day basis, we must learn from Prof. Kwesi Botchwey’s long list of experience, his dedication and his respect for the ordinary Ghanaian.” 

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Funeral date for Prof Kwesi Botchwey announced https://www.adomonline.com/funeral-date-for-prof-kwesi-botchwey-announced/ Mon, 19 Dec 2022 11:43:43 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=2197567 Ghana’s longest-serving Finance Minister, Professor Kwesi Botchwey, who passed away last month, will be laid to rest in a private burial on Thursday, December 22.

The burial will be preceded by a burial service at the Forecourt of the State House in Accra on the same day.

The state event, which begins at 9 a.m., is expected to be attended by the President, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, Ministers of State, former Presidents, members of the Diplomatic Corps and other dignitaries in politics.

The economic community and academia as well as members of the National Democratic Congress will also attend.

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Kwesi Botchwey’s family announces date for his burial https://www.adomonline.com/kwesi-botchweys-family-announces-date-for-his-burial/ Tue, 13 Dec 2022 16:31:47 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=2194870 Family of the late former Finance Minister, Professor Kwesi Botchwey, is set to bury him on 22nd December, 2022.

The burial service will take place at the forecourt of the state house, Accra.

The former Finance Minister died on November 19, 2022, at the Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital, where he was seeking medical care.

Born on the 3 September 1944, Prof. Kwesi Botchwey was 78 at the time of his death.

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We danced ‘Buga’ at your 78th birthday – Mahama says in tribute to Kwesi Botchwey https://www.adomonline.com/we-danced-buga-at-your-78th-birthday-mahama-says-in-tribute-to-kwesi-botchwey/ Tue, 22 Nov 2022 15:21:22 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=2186871 Former President John Mahama has shared his last encounter with the late former Finance Minister, Professor Kwesi Botchwey.

This was in a tribute to eulogise the late economist following his demise on Saturday, November 19, 2022, aged 78.

Taking to his Facebook, Mr Mahama revealed they last met at his [Prof Botchwey’s] 78th birthday where they ate and danced to Nigerian musician, Kizz Daniel’s popular Buga song.

To Mr Mahama, the event, which had scores of dignitaries and well-wishers in attendance, was probably Prof Botchwey’s way of saying goodbye to his friends and comrades.

Prof Botchwey passed at the Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital where he was undergoing treatment for an undisclosed illness.

Meanwhile, Mr Mahama and some members of the National Democratic Congress (NDC) Council of Elders on Monday visited the bereaved family to commiserate with them.

ALSO READ:

Former Finance Minister Kwesi Botchwey passes on

Mahama mourns with Prof Kwesi Botchwey’s family [Photos]

Ghanaians mourn Prof Kwesi Botchwey

Dr Botchwey served as Minister of Finance and Economic Planning from 1982 to 1995 under the erstwhile late President J.J. Rawlings’ administration to assist in stabilising Ghana’s economy at the time.

Below is Mr Mahama’s full tribute:

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Mahama mourns with Prof Kwesi Botchwey’s family [Photos] https://www.adomonline.com/mahama-mourns-with-prof-kwesi-botchweys-family-photos/ Mon, 21 Nov 2022 17:57:17 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=2186486 Former President John Mahama has commiserated with the family of a former Finance Minister, Professor Kwesi Botchwey.

The visit to Prof Botchwey’s residence on Monday was on the back of his death on Saturday, November 19, 2022.

credit: TV3 Ghana

Also present was a former Local Government Minister, Ato Kwamena Ahwoi, and a former General Secretary of the National Democratic Congress (NDC) Alhaji Hudu Yahyah among other NDC gurus.

The longest-serving Minister is said to have passed at the Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital where he was receiving treatment for an undisclosed illness.

RELATED:

Former Finance Minister Kwesi Botchwey passes on

Ghanaians mourn Prof Kwesi Botchwey

The late economist served in office alongside Ghana’s longest-serving head of state, the late former President, Jerry John Rawlings.

Credit: TV3 Ghana

It was from the military era of the Provisional National Defence Council (PNDC) (1982 to 1991) and the constitutional period of the National Democratic Congress (NDC) (1992 to 1995).

Prior to his death, he was also a member of the NDC Council of elders.

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Akufo-Addo mourns Kwesi Botchwey https://www.adomonline.com/akufo-addo-mourns-kwesi-botchwey/ Mon, 21 Nov 2022 17:01:18 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=2186491 President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has mourned former Finance Minister, Professor Kwesi Botchwey, who passed away on Saturday, November 19, 2022.

Describing him as his good friend, President Akufo-Addo, in a Facebook post, said his death is a sad development.

He wrote: The death of my good friend, Dr. Kwesi Botchway, is a very sad development. My contemporary, in the mid-1960s, at the University of Ghana, Legon, Dr. Botchway was a longstanding public servant, who discharged his duties thoughtfully and with dignity, and became Ghana’s longest-serving Minister for Finance and Economic Planning.

The thoughts and sympathies of my wife, Rebecca, the First Lady, and I are with his partner, children and family. I extend my deepest condolences to them, and also to the National Democratic Congress, of which he was a prominent and much respected member. Ghana has lost a fine gentleman and exceptional public servant.

May his soul rest in perfect peace in the Bosom of the Almighty until the Last Day of the Resurrection when we shall all meet again. Amen!

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Kwesi Yankah: My time with Anas https://www.adomonline.com/kwesi-yankah-my-time-with-anas/ Mon, 21 Nov 2022 09:24:16 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=2186160 Monday, 14th November, I was all set going to see the latest operation by this mystery man, Anas Aremeyaw Anas, who for two decades had gotten Ghana turning on his five fingers.  

 The announcement of his forthcoming  project, ‘Galamsey Economy’ thrilled me, and got me heading to town to grab a ticket. The theme somehow merged with my own, and I started dreaming sympathies with my little anti-galamsey efforts.

I called my friend Ace, who disappointed me saying  a synopsis of the show in the media, had nothing to do with Galamsey. Ouch! That was a blow below the belt. My day was ruined, and I did a quick u turn, and headed back home chewing roasted corn.

The deceptive title, Galamsey Economy, gave enough clues that the pet boy probably regressed while I was looking away. Did somebody censor the original story and decide to give the game away, a Freudian slip? 

That didn’t sound like the Anas I had learned to admire.  In truth, I had met him twice. First, the real human Anas Aremeyaw Anas, eyeball to eye ball; and years later Anas as a phantom, a hooded scare crow. Being a writer myself, I knew his early beginnings as a slim scrawny journalist working for Kweku Baako’s Crusading Guide in the 1990s. 

I later met him when he came to do Law at University of Ghana, and visited my office as Pro-VC for student and academic affairs; that was around 2006.

He was a very simple and charming personality, far from a little monster, snooping and tracking executive vices. But I somehow lost track of him, until I started seeing glimpses of the cool gentleman, winning global awards with spellbinding stories.

I was stunned by his early investigations like Ghana’s Mad House, where under cover Anas virtually turned into a crazy man, and entered the asylum in Ghana here, as a patient.

He went on admission, and from day to day ate with inmates and, like them, got injected with daily doses of all relevant medication,  depressants and all. And why take this trouble? He had sacrificed his life for the sake of unearthing the story of gross human rights violations in mental institutions.  That masterpiece in investigative journalism led to the passage of the 2012 Ghana Mental Health Act. Wow!  That was a man after my heart.

Over the years, he had become a household name in the subregion and beyond. Otherwise, how could Anas have attracted the attention of global statesman Barrack Obama, then US President? In his speech while in Ghana in 2009, Obama drew attention to “that courageous journalist, Anas, who risked his life to report the truth.”  I said wow again, exceedingly proud having met the young man from across my desk in Legon.

September 2015, I was among the large throng of people who queued up at the Accra International Conference Centre, waiting to see the debut of Anas’ masterpiece on judicial corruption that exposed 34  Ghanaian judges engaged in vices of various kinds. Those judges and over 105 judicial staff had been caught on camera receiving bribes to influence judgment in Ghanaian courts. The public was indeed amazed by a scandalous underworld of sex, bribery, blackmail, corruption, by respected men in wig and their associates, who thereby decide to free rapists and other criminals and conversely throw innocent ones in jail.

Days after I had watched that project, I saw one of the shamed judges, partly disguised in a cap, and pushing a luggage towards the departure lounge of Accra airport. It was weeks later news spread that one of the named judges had quietly left the country.

November 2016, a year thereafter; I got a rare opportunity to interact with the man Anas, in full flight and regalia.

9th November that year. Here was Anas at my doorstep. I was in full charge of Central University as Vice Chancellor, and had introduced a distinguished lecture series, which had brought to campus the likes of Dr Kwesi Botchwey, Dr Mahamudu Bawumia, Professor Adigun Agbaje from Ibadan University. To sustain students’ enthusiasm, why not Anas as the next speaker? The thought alone turned the campus topsy turvy. Anas at Central? Yes. It was a scoop, and I had conspired with the dynamic director of  the school of communication studies, Dr Ransford Antwi, for the surprise.

Wednesday morning. The 3,000 capacity auditorium of Central University was not big enough. A rare gem was in the house. There was excitement; but also panic, a security nightmare. The question was how to host Anas without putting him in jeopardy; who would escort him; how to interact with him, etc. The campus security was on the alert, but even unsure from what direction he was coming. Did he say which access route he would use; which gate? From which direction: Tema or Aflao? The gentleman had decided to keep us in the dark.

9.45am. Anas was on campus with plain clothed security, having somehow eluded our campus watch dogs. He had materialized.

The packed auditorium was a mix of students, staff and faculty that were all ears, to seek answers to hearsays and puzzles about the man. How does he get his several spooky stories; what makes him ubiquitous? And is this really journalism? But even before the encounter, I got a sense of his operations speaking to students.

I was told Anas had student volunteers all over the country working for him free of charge. These were well trained and could be reached anytime to assist with secret operations. Some of the students, I was scared to hear, were at Central University!

But who was Anas himself? Before us that day at Central, were three hooded lookalikes, one of whom was the real Anas. The truth was further compounded when after my introduction of the guest speaker, all three lookalikes stepped up from the high table and stood behind microphone stand. After a moment of suspense,  the real Anas took the microphone from me and announced himself while the other two dummies stood fidgeting throughout the interaction.

The 90 minute dialogue with students was thrilling and educative, giving him the opportunity to narrate his harrowing life experiences: disguises, escapades, close encounters; frustrations, successes and narrow misses. The award winning experience with mental patients where he was injected with depressants,  was the most audacious; and he explained the safety measures he took to reduce adverse health effects.

 All eyes rivetted on him, he spoke freely, pacing back and forth the crowded auditorium and bending occasionally to chat with individual students. Vigilant from a distance was his own security, that was alert, and ready to dash and intervene where necessary.

After the encounter, my staff and I returned to my office, waiting for Anas to join us for further interaction and refreshments. But that was a mirage. Anas Aremeyaw Anas had mysteriously disappeared!

November 2022, a few days ago, and six years after Central, Anas was playing at a theatre near me; but I responded with waned enthusiasm. The once classic venture appeared to be limping, and claims of  entrapment by culprits, were gaining ground. Is Ghana losing this great morality tool? Is the project heading towards commodification? Has the pet Anas even decided to shield the true monsters of galamsey?

Kweku Baako, mentor of Anas, I urge you to pause and review the entire Anas enterprise, or simply call it a day.

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Ghanaians mourn Prof Kwesi Botchwey https://www.adomonline.com/ghanaians-mourn-prof-kwesi-botchwey/ Sat, 19 Nov 2022 13:23:08 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=2185769 Ghanaians have been thrown into a state of mourning after the news of former Finance Minister, Professor Kwesi Botchwey‘s death.

The National Democratic Congress (NDC) guru passed on at 78 after a short illness.

He is said to have died on Saturday, November 19, 2021, at the Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital where he was undergoing treatment.

Many have taken to various media platforms to express their shock and sadness at the incident.

Others have also paid glowing tribute in his honour, stating he lived a good life.

Several messages of sympathy and condolences have also been sent to the family.

Read more reactions below:

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Former Finance Minister Kwesi Botchwey passes on https://www.adomonline.com/former-finance-minister-kwesi-botchwey-passes-on/ Sat, 19 Nov 2022 12:03:36 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=2185761 Ghana’s former Minister of Finance, Professor Kwesi Botchwey is dead.

According to sources, the National Democratic Congress (NDC) stalwart passed on Saturday, November 19, 2021, after a short illness.

The sad incident occurred at the Korle-Bu Teaching Hospital, where he was undergoing treatment.

He was 78.

ALSO READ:

Ghana in economic distress – Prof. Kwesi Botchwey

Prof. Kwesi Botchwey proposes 4 solutions for Ghana’s economy

Prof Botchwey prior to his death was a key member of the NDC Council of Elders.

He also played an integral role in the evolution of the NDC, from its PNDC era.

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Seidu Agongo offered to help while others mocked me – Kofi Amoabeng https://www.adomonline.com/seidu-agongo-offered-to-help-while-others-mocked-me-kofi-amoabeng/ Wed, 05 Oct 2022 14:35:02 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=2168900 The founder of the defunct UT Bank, Capt. (rtd) Prince Kofi Amoabeng, has disclosed that philanthropist and businessman, Alhaji Seidu Agongo, offered to extend his benevolence to him when he appeared in images wearing an unusually scruffy beard.

The retired Ghana Armed Forces Captain said while other Ghanaians used those pictures to mock and laugh at him, Alhaji Agongo, also the founder of the collapsed Heritage Bank, contacted him on the quiet to ask if he could be of help in any financial difficulty that he might have found himself in.

The seasoned entrepreneur said although he did not pursue the benevolent request, the gesture by the owner of the Class Media Group (CMG), among other businesses, touched him in a manner that made him understand that at least, one of his fellow Ghanaians cared about his welfare.

Capt (rtd) Amoabeng made the disclosure when he spoke on the CTV Breakfast Show, on Tuesday.

He said this led to him forming a pleasant image of Mr Agongo’s personality although he had not met him before.

He added that it was also the main reason why he accepted to appear on the CTV Breakfast Show, one of the stations of the CMG empire. `

“Actually, the reason why I could not say no to your invitation was because of Seidu Agongo’s personality,” he said.

“I have never set eyes on him but at some point in time, after the COVID-19 pandemic hit, I started wearing this beard and I took a picture of myself and posted it on social media.

“That set tongues wagging that ‘I was on the verge of death, ‘I’ am now a pauper,’ among other negative comments.

“But the boss of this place [CMG], Seidu Agongo, sent me a WhatsApp message that if I am in difficulty, I should send him my account number for him to give me some money.”

“Of course, I did not pursue it but I am ever so grateful that, at least, one Ghanaian thought that instead of laughing at him, let me help,” he added.

Pictures

The said pictures, which had Capt (rtd) Amoabeng in a baseball-like cap over T-shirt and a scruffy beard, were released around May 2020.

They came at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic when lock downs forced many to cultivate new lifestyles that included keeping beards and bushy hairs.

Prior to those pictures, Capt (rtd) was known for his dapper suits or neatly pressed African prints over trousers.

Bank collapse

Commenting on the collapse of Heritage Bank, Capt (rtd) Amoageng said he was pained by the action, given the state of the bank at the time of the collapse.

“The Bank of Ghana had issued a licence to Heritage Bank and Heritage Bank had not operated for long. So, unlike UT Bank, Heritage Bank had no bad loans or anything and it was a wholly-owned Ghanaian company that we had to nurture to grow,” he said.

“Secondly, the owners of Heritage Bank found it fit to appoint a solid board. I mean, the chairman was Prof Kwesi Botchwey. When it comes to finance in this country, he is the safest hands you can get; he has seen it all.”


“As chairman, the board members ran the bank, not the owner and so, I do not know Seidu Agongo – as I told you, I haven’t met him before – but I know Kwesi Botchwey and I know his track record.

“So, if you have a bank that hasn’t got any baggage, it is fresh and it is gotten a board headed by Kwesi Botchwey, then it means its closure was a worse decision than UT Bank,” Capt (rtd) Amoabeng said.

“As for UT Bank, we owed and they could have bailed us out but they decided not to bail us and that is why I mention that Heritage Bank, for example, collapsed out of sheer wickedness”, he added.

He said the financial sector clean-up exercise set out a dangerous precedent that must be discouraged.

Banking sector cleanup

The UT Bank collapsed in August 2017 as one of two banks whose closure would herald a financial sector clean-up exercise that saw the licences of nine banks and more than 370 financial institutions revoked.

The exercise cost the state in excess of GH¢21 billion and threw thousands of employees and hundreds of thousands of their dependents into disarray.

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Hardship- ‘Akufo-Addo must be humble and call Mahama, Kwesi Botchey for ideas’ [Audio] https://www.adomonline.com/hardship-akufo-addo-must-be-humble-and-call-mahama-kwesi-botchey-for-ideas-audio/ Fri, 18 Mar 2022 13:28:16 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=2092958 President Nana Akufo-Addo has been urged to be humble, admit there is a challenge and call for national dialogue over the raging economic hardships.

“I think the best thing first and foremost is that Akufo-Addo and his team must admit to Ghanaians that there is a problem and then you tell us your alternatives or better still call for national dialogues.

“Call people like Seth Terpker, Prof. Kwesi Botchwey, Kwabena Duffuor or even call John Mahama and seek advice from him as a nation and not as NPP but usual of them, they claim they have the men but now see, petrol selling at almost 10,” a former District Chief Executive for Sekyere Afram Plains, Fuseini Donkor, said on Adom FM’s morning show Dwaso Nsem, Friday.

The Vice President Dr Mahamudu Bawumia, prior to taking over power in 2016 through his lectures, gave the people of Ghana hope that things can be made right with homegrown solutions.

ALSO READ:

Through his lectures and seminars he spoke at, he indicated that Ghana’s problems were a result of the incompetence of the managers of the country’s economy.

Currently, the people of Ghana are complaining about hardship and the rise in the cost of living in the country.

Fuel prices are skyrocketing while the Ghana cedi is falling against other currencies in the world.

However, to Mr Donkor, nothing seems to be done to salvage the situation, especially by the people who claimed to have the solutions to the country’s problems.

“This government is just jumping and clutching to excuses. Things went bad even before covid but they used covid as an excuse and we still benefitted from the fund but they have not accounted for it.

 “We are now organising a Cabinet meeting and just going to talk without any solution. Where is the economic team when the Finance Minister has run out of ideas? Bawumia is in E-library learning and the rest are all lost and so they have to be candid and tell Ghanaians the real truth about the economy,” he added.

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Full text: Kwesi Botchwey lecture on State of the Nation’s economy and politics https://www.adomonline.com/full-text-kwesi-botchwey-lecture-on-state-of-the-nations-economy-and-politics/ Thu, 10 Mar 2022 23:06:26 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=2089806 Former Finance Minister, Prof Kwesi Botchwey, spoke at an Independence Day Lecture in Accra on Monday, March 7, 2022.

The maiden lecture was on the theme: ‘On the State of the Nation’s Economy and Politics: 65 Years After Independence – The Path to Sustainable Development and Democratic Consolidation.’

Below is the full text of his speech:

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Akufo-Addo, Bawumia, other officials pay last respects to former minister [Photos] https://www.adomonline.com/akufo-addo-bawumia-other-officials-pay-last-respects-to-former-minister-photos/ Wed, 09 Mar 2022 16:16:39 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=2088858 A former Greater Accra Regional Minister, Ishmael Ashitey, has been buried.

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The solemn ceremony took place on Monday, March 7, 2022, at Tema Manhean.

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Present at the funeral was President Nana Akufo-Addo who led a government and New Patriotic Party (NPP) delegation to pay their last respects.

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Others were the Vice President, Dr Mahamudu Bawumia; the National Chairman of the NPP, Mr Freddie Blay; and a former Speaker of Parliament, Prof. Aaron Mike Oquaye.

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The rest were Chief of Staff; Frema Akosua Osei Opare, Greater Accra Regional Minister; Henry Quartey, Roads and Highways Minister; Kwesi Amoako Atta, Foreign Affairs Minister; Shirley Ayorkor Botchwey and other top government officials.

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Mr Ashitey, who was also a former Greater Accra Regional Chairman, died on Friday, January 7, 2022, after a short illness at the Tema General Hospital.

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He was 68 years old.

His death is said to have occurred about a week after he returned from the United States where he was undergoing treatment for an undisclosed illness.

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 He was a three-time Member of Parliament for Tema East from 1996 to 2008.

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In Parliament, he also served on the Mines and Energy, Foreign Affairs, Government’s Assurances and the House committees, among others.

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Ghana in economic distress – Prof. Kwesi Botchwey https://www.adomonline.com/ghana-in-economic-distress-prof-kwesi-botchwey/ Tue, 08 Mar 2022 11:07:13 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=2088366 Former Finance Minister, Prof. Kwesi Botchwey, has painted a gloomy image of Ghana’s economy describing it as one that is suffering grave distress.

Prof Botchwey wants the government to thoroughly review the economy to cut down expenditure and avoid measures that will mortgage Ghana’s future.

He made these comments at a public lecture organised by the One Ghana Movement at the University of Ghana on Monday.

Ghana in economic distress; policies have lost credibility - Kwasi Botchway

“We are no longer seen as creditworthy. Our policies are no longer seen as credible in the face of the investor community,” he said on Monday.

Former Finance Minister

The NDC stalwart enumerated some of the challenges that, he believes, demonstrate the failures of the government currently.

According to him, “the exchange rate at the forex bureaus is nearing 8 cedis to the dollar. Fuel prices at the filling stations have crossed the ¢8 per litre bar. Inflation is back in double-digits nearing about 15 per cent.”

“The government is struggling to raise money locally and is accumulating arrears to several programmes; roads, school feeding, LEAP, even salaries,” he added.

The Independence Day event, which was held at the Cedi House of UG’s Department of Economics, was under the theme ‘On the State of the Nation’s Economy and Politics: 65 years after independence – The Path to Sustainable Development and Democratic Consolidation.”

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Prof. Kwesi Botchwey proposes 4 solutions for Ghana’s economy https://www.adomonline.com/prof-kwesi-botchwey-proposes-4-solutions-for-ghanas-economy/ Tue, 08 Mar 2022 10:29:51 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=2088355 A former Minister of Finance, Prof. Kwesi Botchwey, has proposed a number of solutions for Ghana’s current economy.

Delivering a public lecture on the theme, ‘On the State of the Nation’s Economy and Politics: 65 years after independence – The Path to Sustainable Development and Democratic Consolidation’, Prof. Botchwey said the country has made some significant progress since independence.

“We’ve come a very long way in our development journey as a nation since independence. Of course we have made progress since then, a lot of it. To deny this is to do a great disservice. We have grown our GDP significantly, even our HDI has seen some improvements.

“But behind all the sounds and furious claims and counterclaims; which may not be borne out of facts, we clearly have not succeeded in liberating our full potential as a nation,” he added.

He said with the pace at which the country is going, it will not be able to move a bulk of its poor out of poverty in another generation.

He added that central to the economic distress the country faces is the perception that it is not creditworthy.

“When money is borrowed, it is required that we put our public finances in a position to settle our debts. When servicing our debts can only be done at the expense of delivering public services, especially to the poor and vulnerable, then we are in trouble.

“This is the predicament that we find ourselves in today. The issue really is not whether we go to the IMF or not. That is a red herring. Indeed, we are a sovereign nation, and a proud one at that and can decide as to whether or not to seek after the IMF. The IMF with all its power and leverage can simply not force a programme on us or any country.”

He ruled out the idea of borrowing money from international financial agencies to revive the economy on grounds that “borrowed money always comes with strings attached.”

“Our sovereignty comes with the right to manage or mismanage our economy the way we please. I agree entirely with the principle of national ownership of development policy. But we must know that we will reap the whirlwind if we should fault on account of our own policy choices.”

Prof. Botchwey further proposed some solutions for restoring macro-economic stability as elaborated below:

1. It is idle to pretend that we can address our economic issues without some hardship, at least in the short-term. There is simply no silver bullets or magical solution somewhere that can bring lasting relief without some level of pain and sacrifice. The real question is how we distribute this hardship in an equitable or transparent manner.
Throwing more light on this, he said “it is inequitable to have grants of about 1.5 million beneficiaries of LEAP programme unpaid for months, because you are in a crisis. That is not where the hardship to hit.”

2. The real problem with our public finances is structural and will require a thorough review of all sources of pressure in the budget including every flagship programme and it’s sustainability and impact, all the options must be on the table. We must not for instance transition temporary spending incurred during the pandemic into permanent public spending, when we are already struggling to collect revenues.

3. We must resist the lure of solutions that will further mortgage the future of young generations to come, such as collatoralising public revenue steams. Above all, we must resist solutions that we delay hard decisions.

4. The country needs to build consensus around the reforms that are necessary to resolve the nation’s creditworthyness.

The lecture was designed to provide a constructive platform for engaging and shaping solutions for the socio-economic challenges and prospects of Ghana.

Organized by the OneGhana Movement in partnership with the University of Ghana Department of Economics and School of Social Sciences, the event was held at the Cedi Conference Centre at the university’s Department of Economics.

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Ofosu Ampofo’s take on how NDC can recapture power https://www.adomonline.com/ofosu-ampofos-take-on-how-ndc-can-recapture-power/ Thu, 22 Apr 2021 18:44:50 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=1951151 Chairman of the National Democratic Congress (NDC), Samuel Ofosu-Ampofo, has said a united front is the only way the party can recapture power.

The party’s post-election analysis, he said, has revealed the party worked extremely hard in the 2020 general election but circumstances beyond them could not guarantee them a win.

“We had a stronger horse with a stronger rider and the election 2020 was a closely fought one. Unity is strength and that is the only thing that can bring the NDC back to power again,” he said on Asempa FM’s Ekosii Sen.

Mr Ofosu-Ampofo stressed the party was built on the foundation of unity, hence the need for the rank and file to stay together.

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Though he admitted, as a chairman, he couldn’t do everything alone hence consults a lot, he has made the party attractive and much stronger since the beginning of his tenure.

“I have made the party attractive and strong since I became a chairman and have brought a lot of middle, top class, and an array of professionals to the party. This I believe is [due to] a complete implementation of the Kwesi Botchwey report,” he added.

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Kwamena Ahwoi narrates how he ‘discovered’ Afari-Gyan at a drinking spot https://www.adomonline.com/kwamena-ahwoi-narrates-how-he-discovered-afari-gyan-at-a-drinking-spot/ Tue, 04 Aug 2020 10:54:09 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=1835944 Prof. Kwamena Ahwoi has revealed that he discovered the man who will go on to become Ghana’s longest-serving Electoral Commission Chairman, Dr Kwadwo Afari-Gyan, at a drinking spot.

The former Local Government Minister said he had been sent on a mission by Captain Kojo Tsikata to make contact with Kofi Drah, a Senior Lecturer at the Department of Political Science at the University of Ghana.

He was to convince him to join the committee of experts to work on Ghana’s 1992 constitution.

Prof. Ahwoi said while he was on his way, he branched into a drinking spot at Achimota Forest area where a number of University of Ghana lecturers including Dr Kwesi Botchwey used to meet for occasional social drinks.

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In his new controversial book ‘Working with Rawlings’, the local government expert recalled meeting Dr Afari-Gyan drinking alone.

“I joined him and engaged him in a conversation, hoping to find out from him the residence of Mr Drah. As the conversation dragged on, I began to see Dr Afari-Gyan in a new light. He was not only a progressive intellectual; he was also pro-Nkrumaist and not hostile to the revolution.

“I steered the conversation in the direction of the unfolding transition to constitutional rule and his views seemed to echo those of the Provisional National Defence Council.

“I aborted my trip to locate Mr Drah’s house, turned back and reported to Captain Tsikata’s Office the next day. The rest is history,” Prof. Ahwoi wrote.

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Kwamena Ahwoi makes shocking revelation about Naana Opoku-Agyemang [Video] https://www.adomonline.com/kwamena-ahwoi-makes-shocking-revelation-about-naana-opoku-agyemang-video/ Tue, 28 Jul 2020 18:37:53 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=1833328

Leading member of the National Democratic Congress (NDC), Kwamena Ahwoi, has revealed Prof Naana Jane Opoku-Agyemang was not his preferred choice for the party’s running mate.

Though he did not mention his preferred candidate, Mr Ahwoi said he had to support Prof. Opoku-Agyemang immediately her appointment was announced.

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Speaking in an exclusive interview with Kojo Yankson, he described the NDC running mate as a good material for the new role.

He also said her appointment had caused some level of confusion in the governing New Patriotic Party as the NDC charts a new course by nominating a woman.

“It is not time yet. Otherwise, I would reveal to you what I did and who my preferred choice was for the running mate position. Jane was not my choice but the moment she was announced I accepted her because she is a good material,” he said.

“She was President Mahama’s Education Minister. She was not my Education Minister. If anybody should be a better judge of her as a politician; it should be Mahama,” he said.

The Former Minister for Local Government and Rural Development also described the pairing of Mr Mahama and Prof Opoku-Agyemang as a brilliant ticket.

He recommended the NDC ticket to Ghanaians.

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Why I stepped back – Kwesi Botchwey breaks silence on running mate brouhaha https://www.adomonline.com/why-i-stepped-back-kwesi-botchwey-breaks-silence-on-running-mate-brouhaha/ Tue, 28 Jul 2020 16:37:10 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=1833190 Professor Kwesi Botchwey, Ghana’s longest-serving Finance Minister, has disclosed that he decided to step back in the running mate nomination of the National Democratic Congress (NDC).

The reason, he said, was to allow for fresh faces to take up that position and that anybody who is articulate and understands the fundamentals of governance fits that position.

He, however, disagreed with suggestions that it is only persons with an economic background that fits the vice-presidential position or slot.

Responding to what he makes of the selection of Professor Naana Jane Opoku-Agyemang as the running mate of John Dramani Mahama, Prof Botchwey said she has what it takes to partner the NDC flagbearer.

He said she has proven track record to partner the flagbearer to capture power in the December 7, 2020 polls.

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Prof Botchwey’s name came up last year as a possible choice as running mate to the flagbearer.

But, reacting after Prof Opoku-Agyemang was selected, Prof Botchwey said: “I think that every party, our party [NDC] especially has forged a generational transition so that we, the older ones can step back a bit to provide guidance and support.

“We can’t have the same generation or people leading the party. That was my view and I think I’ve been vindicated, you’ve seen Naana, she is very focused, she is very driven, she is humble, she is well-spoken, she is every bit of what we will want to see in the Vice President. So this is about Naana, it is not about Kwesi Botchwey.

“There is nothing in our laws in our constitution anywhere that says that the Vice President must be an economist. What you need is to be a good social analyst, a good social scientist, with the tools to ask the right questions and be focused on the business of national development and that is all you need.”

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Ken Agyapong roots for Zanetor as Mahama’s running mate [audio] https://www.adomonline.com/ken-agyapong-roots-for-zanetor-as-mahamas-running-mate-audio/ Tue, 02 Jun 2020 20:29:52 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=1804803

Former President John Mahama has been advised to consider making Member of Parliament for Klottey Korle, Dr Zanetor Rawlings as his running mate ahead of the December polls.

Her choice, according to Member of Parliament for Assin Central, Kennedy Agyapong will bring dignity to the ticket.

Daughter of former President Jerry Rawlings, according to sources, is part of those penciled for the position.

Other party bigwigs being considered include Prof. Kwesi Botchwey, Dr Kwabena Duffuor, Eric Opoku and Cassiel Ato Forson.

Kennedy Agyapong, MP, Assin Central

But Mr Agyapong said among all the names being bandied about, the only honourable person among them is Dr Rawlings.

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According to him, he has dossiers on all the prospective running mates who played key roles in the erstwhile Mahama administration.

“Apart from Zenator, I have information on all of them. If Mahama chooses one, I will release the information in three days,” he said.

The difficulty in picking a running mate six months to the general election, the Assin Central MP said, exposes the incompetence of Mr Mahama.

Mr Agyapong advised Mr Mahama to consider Dr Rawlings because she will use her charisma and father’s goodwill to make the ticket attractive.

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Mystery of NDC’s vice-presidential candidate https://www.adomonline.com/mystery-of-ndcs-vice-presidential-candidate/ Thu, 14 May 2020 17:58:39 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=1794617 It will be a defining moment for the NDC when former president Mahama finally presents the name of his running mate in the 2020 election to the party’s Council of Elders and National Executive Committee but very interesting developments are already coming up ahead of Mahama’s announcement.

What was purported last week to be the final shortlist of Mahama’s potential running mates, was described by the NDC leadership as a fictitious one.

Some of the names still making the rounds include Dr. Kwabena Duffour, former Governor of the Bank of Ghana, Professor Kwesi Botchwey, former Minister of Finance and Economic Planning, Zanetor Rawlings, a medical doctor and daughter of former President J.J Rawlings, former Attorney-General, Marrietta Appiah-Opong and Alex Mould, former CEO of the Ghana National Petroleum Corporation.

The rest of the names on the purported list include Dr. Johnson Asiama, a former Deputy Governor of the Bank of Ghana, Professor Nana Opoku Agyemang, former Minister of Education and Ato Forson, MP for Ajumako-Enyan-Esiam.

Some media reports claiming reliable sources within the NDC now say information about Mahama’s running mate has been revealed and that the sources have described the former president’s choice as a native of the Ashanti Region “with deep roots in the Ashanti royal family and wide acceptance among party rank and file.”

The reports quoted a dependable source within the party leadership as saying that the person Mahama has chosen is “well-connected internationally, very intelligent, networked Ashanti with royal and grassroots links, strategic thinking capacity, extremely resourceful to the party and highly well-spoken of”.

According to the source, this could point to Mr. Kojo Bonsu, an astute organizer and royal Ashanti family member with a track record of achievements in business, politics, public sector administration, sports administration and corporate leadership.

The description of Mahama’s alleged running mate however also fits the person of another Ashanti royal of considerable accomplishment, Kwame Awuah-Darko. Kwame Awuah-Darko’s father hails from Juaben-Asante and his mother from Akyeam in the Eastern Region.

He is described by the sources as “an Ashanti royal, business tycoon and politician with multimillion-dollar interests in international Insurance, energy and real Estate and who is a former CEO of the Bulk Oil Storage and Transport Company BOST and the Tema Oil Refinery. He is said to be a reserved but active member of the NDC.

Of all the potential running mates mentioned in media reports, it is only Kojo Bonsu who can sway large numbers of votes to a Mahama ticket when it comes to the Ashanti vote which is crucial.

The NDC has maintained a constant of 22 percent of the votes in Ashanti! With rigorous campaigning on his old turf, Kojo Bonsu could easily obtain and add a minimum of ten percent of the Ashanti vote to the NDC’s 22 percent. A total of 32 percent would be a win for NDC.

The names making the rounds as possible running mates for Mahama are those of respected, frontline members of the NDC but most have not had as much contact with the party’s rank and file and done as much leg work for the party, as the former mayor of Kumasi.

Choosing someone older than himself in the name of striking an age balance on his ticket or because an older running mate is unlikely to try running for President in the 2024 election could cost Mahama votes among the youth in Ashanti.

Investment scouts around the world have an eye on the progress of electoral politics in countries in which they have business interests and are not likely to be impressed with a presidential ticket on which a presidential candidate and a running mate will be too aged after an eight-year term, to continue to be attractive to voters.

The sources of votes for a Mahama-Bonsu ticket in Ashanti could be many and varied. Market Women and traders in Greater Kumasi are one source: Market women in greater Kumasi love the former mayor of the city. They call Kojo Bonsu “Ohemaaba.”

Take a walk through the Kumasi Central Market any day, mention his name and watch their reaction.

The people of Ashanti consider Bonsu as one of their own, a fact likely to cause some unease for the NPP if he is on the Mahama ticket.

Kumasi voters have good reason to throw their weight behind a ticket with Bonsu’s name on it: His administration gave several markets in a Kumasi a facelift but most notably, the Asawasi Market, the Tafo Market, and Atonso-Agogo Market.

Amid public skepticism, Bonsu also redesigned and rehabilitated the famous Prempeh Hall into the architecturally imposing edifice it is today.

He built a spectacular fence around the Kejetia Market and created the Kumasi Rattray Park which has an artificial lake, a golf course, children’s playground, gymnasium, a six-square meter dancing fountain, restaurants and cafeterias.

Floating voters among the youth are likely to favour a ticket that has someone with the militant posture and experience of fighting in the trenches for a political course.

Many young people in Ashanti have been inspired by Mr. Bonsu’s trail of achievements.

Even rival players on the political turf readily concede Bonsus typical game-changing abilities in business and politics: The founder an dleader of the Independent People’s Party, Mr. Kofi Akpaloo once said of Bonsu: “Everywhere he {Bonsu} goes, he brings transformation. His term at GOIL testifies to this.”

When the sports kit giant ADIDAS went searching for its first representative for West Africa, the job went to Ghanaian, Mr. Kojo Bonsu.

As Board Chairman of the National Sports Council, he led the re-branding of the National Sports Council into a Sports Authority.

His spectacular re-branding of GOIL transformed Ghana’s leading indigenous oil company into a great international brand.

The former mayor of Kumasi is a very popular fan of Asante Kotoko FC and if politics and sports easily coincide as some pundits insist, his name on the Mahama ticket could attract votes from teeming mass of Kotoko FC supporters.

Mr. Bonsu is held in considerable esteem in the NDC. He worked hard behind the scenes for the late President Mills’ 2008 campaign, helping to tout the campaigns “Better Ghana Agenda” slogan across Ghana.

He fought hard to maintain the unity of the NDC and keep up the sagging morale of party rank and file after the party’s electoral defeat in 201, by organizing the NDC’s “Unity Walk.”

The “Unity Walk” was taken to all parts of the country and helped to repel threats of disunity emerging within the party.

The NDC may have lost the 2016 election but it is important to remember that in the 2008 election, the NDC succeeded in winning over 400, 000 votes in the Ashanti Region, which is considered the stronghold of the opposition NPP, and in the 2012 general election, they increased their votes in the region to 612,000 votes.

Bonsu is reported to have told some close associates that he will campaign for those votes and more if he is a running mate.

Other sources insist that someone else other than Bonsu may be Mahama’s choice. In the end, the prerogative of choosing a running mate lies with the presidential candidate and it is over to Mahama to make his decision.

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NDC clears air on selection of Mahama’s running mate https://www.adomonline.com/ndc-clears-air-on-selection-of-mahamas-running-mate/ Wed, 06 May 2020 17:29:35 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=1789788 The General Secretary of the opposition National Democratic Congress(NDC), Johnson Asiedu Nketia, has dismissed reports suggesting that some key members of the party have been shortlisted for selection as a running mate to the party’s flagbearer, John Mahama.

A statement, signed by Mr Nketia, said the party’s Special Vetting Committee had settled on Mr Kwame Awuah Darko, Dr Kwabena Duffuor, Prof. Kwesi Botchwey, Mr Kwasi Ahwoi, and Dr Zanetor Rawlings as candidates for selection to partner Mr Mahama in the upcoming December 7, 2020, general election.

However, Mr Nketia in a statement, noted that he has not issued any such statement or caused such publication to be made on the subject of selecting the NDC running mate.

“The general public is, therefore, advised to ignore any such frivolous and fictitious letter, which is clearly a creation of some unscrupulous persons, who want to divert attention from serious burning national issues,” he said.

READ ALSO:

Popular journalist reveals region Mahama’s running mate will come from

Naming a running mate amid COVID-19 crisis not necessary – Mahama

 Mahama finally breaks silence on his running mate [read]

Below is the full statement:

5th May, 2020

For Immediate Release:

DISCLAIMER: IGNORE FAKE NEWS ON SELECTION OF NDC RUNNING MATE

My attention has been drawn to a fraudulent fake letter on the selection of the 2020 NDC Running Mate, purported to be signed and issued by me. First of all, I have not issued any such statement or cause such publication to be made on my behalf on the subject of selecting the NDC Running Mate.

The general public is therefore advised to ignore any such frivolous and fictitious letter, which is clearly a creation of some unscrupulous persons, who want to divert attention from serious burning national issues.

Let me use this opportunity to emphasize that the purported letterhead, reference number, email address and signature on the said publication are all fake.

Secondly, no subcommittee of the party has been formed or tasked by the National Executive Committee for selection of a Running Mate. For the avoidance of doubt, the procedures for selecting a Running Mate as prescribed under article 43 of our party Constitution, does not include the formation of any such Sub-Committee.

This fake news comes in the wake of several attempts by some criminal minds to use the names of some high ranking officials of the party to defraud the unsuspecting public, including some Parliamentary Candidates of our party. This is utterly condemnable.

Even though I do not own any Facebook account, I have had cause to report to the cybercrime unit of the Ghana Police Service, activities of some criminal minded fraudsters who have created an account in my name and are using same to defraud innocent citizens. We are eagerly awaiting for action by the Cyber Crime Unit of the CID.

We entreat our teeming members, supporters, sympathizers and the general public to ignore this fraudulent document. We wish to assure all NDC members that leadership shall remain focused on the agenda to #KickNanaOut, no matter the machinations of our detractors.

Signed
Johnson Asiedu Nketia
(General Secretary)

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NDC calls for anti-nepotism law as it describes Akufo-Addo’s govt as most nepotistic https://www.adomonline.com/ndc-calls-for-anti-nepotism-law-as-it-describes-akufo-addos-govt-as-most-nepotistic/ Tue, 05 Nov 2019 18:32:53 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=1718533  

The opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC) has taken President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo to the cleanest for flooding his government with family and friends in his bid to ‘Capture the State.’

According to the party, the Akufo-Addo government, by this deed, has earned the title as the most nepotistic regime Ghana has ever had.

Addressing the press in Accra, Monday the NDC “in view of the institutionalisation of nepotism by President Akufo-Addo”, proposed “the enactment of an anti-nepotism legislation to help check abuse of political power in the advancement of the nepotistic agenda of President Akufo-Addo, his acolytes and any unforeseen recurrence is long overdue in Ghana.”

The umbrella family said the law could take the form, and even be an improvement of section 3110 of title 5, of the United States Code, which forbids a public official from appointing a relative to a civilian position in the agency over which that official exercises jurisdiction or control.

To back its claim, the National Communication Officer of the party, Sammy Gyamfi provided names of 51 people he claimed are friends and family members appointed into the Akufo-Addo government.

Read full details below:

A MOMENT OF TRUTH PRESS CONFERENCE ON THE UNPRECEDENTED NEPOTISM UNDER PRESIDENT AKUFO-ADDO, ADDRESSED BY THE NATIONAL COMMUNICATION OFFICER OF THE NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC CONGRESS (NDC), COMRADE SAMMY GYAMFI.

Tuesday, 5th November 2019

INTRODUCTION

Good morning to you all, distinguished ladies and gentlemen of the press. On behalf of the National Democratic Congress, I welcome you to the Sixth edition of the Moment of Truth series. As always, we thank you for honouring this invitation despite your busy schedules.

These regular engagements, afford us the opportunity to critically assess the performance of the deceptive and corrupt Akufo-Addo government in all areas of our national life – by separating truths from lies, facts from fiction, and good governance from bad governance in order to help Ghanaians demand accountability from their duty bearers.

Friends from the media, this afternoon, we shall discuss a very important subject. One that is not only critical to good governance, but also fundamental to the fight against corruption. We shall talk about nepotism – The ongoing Family and Friends governance of President Akufo-Addo and its disastrous effects on Ghana.

NEPOTISM

Simply defined, nepotism is the practice among those with power or influence of favouring relatives or friends, especially by giving them jobs. The practice is considered to be unethical, largely due to its conflict with the values of fairness and good governance. In governance, nepotism is even more dangerous due to its potential to compromise transparency and the fight against corruption as we have seen under this Akufo-Addo government.

Friends from the media, after our meticulous investigations into appointments made by President Akufo-Addo since the year 2017, we submit that the Akufo-Addo/Bawumia government is the most nepotistic government in the sixty-two-year history of Ghana and we dare say, the world. Even Idi Amin Dada – the Butcher of Uganda, Jean-Bedel Bokassa and Mobutu Sese Seko – the looter of Zaire (now Democratic Republic of Congo) will envy President Akufo-Addo’s unprecedented brand of nepotism and clannism.

CANDIDATE AKUFO-ADDO’s FALSE ALLEGATION AGAINST PRESIDENT MAHAMA AND HIS FAKE PROMISE IN 2016

 Members of the inky fraternity, it is important at this stage to give a brief historical context to this whole discussion about nepotism.

You may recall, that at an NPP Delegates Conference in Kumasi on Saturday, 17 January, 2016, then Flagbearer of the New Patriotic Party (NPP), Nana Akufo-Addo, made a solemn promise to the people of Ghana that, “I will not operate a family and friends’ government.” At that meeting, the NPP leader chided then President John Mahama for running what he called “a family and friends’ government,” and promised that should he win power, he will not operate same.

It is instructive to note, that at the time the current President was accusing former President Mahama of running a family and friends’ government, the NDC government, then, had only one appointee with any form of familial relations with the former President. That appointee was Hon. Joyce Bawa Mogtari (former Deputy Minister of Transport and a distant cousin to the former President).

Despite this notorious fact which was known to candidate Akufo-Addo, so loud were the accusations of nepotism against the erstwhile NDC administration, that Prof. Stephen Adei (a friend of Akufo-Addo, former Rector of GIMPA and now Chairman of the NDPC) had cause to accuse former President Mahama of running a government full of what he called “northerners”.

Distinguished friends from the media, as fate will have it, the man who accused the decent NDC administration of nepotism, now occupies the highest office of the land, and has a chance to keep his own vow made to Ghanaians in 2016. And what do we see? His promise not to operate a family and friends’ government now lies in tatters; trampled upon with indescribable contempt.

NEPOTISM: A DELIBERATE POLICY UNDER PRESIDENT AKUFO-ADDO

Indeed, contrary to his campaign promise, President Akufo-Addo has normalized the culture of nepotism in his government. He has given true meaning to nepotism by surrounding himself with a plethora of family members, friends, loved ones including his former lovers all in furtherance of his state-capture agenda. 

President Akufo-Addo has equated his powers conferred on him by the 1992 Constitution to hire and fire, to mean excessively and capriciously dispensing generosity to family, friends, kinsmen and loved ones. With flippant abuse of his powers and privileges as President of Ghana, he has appointed such people into various juicy positions in his government in a way never seen in the history of this country.

Similarly, the Vice President, Dr Mahamudu Bawumia, and other key government functionaries have also joined the President in this race to the bottom. Taking a cue from their boss, they have joined the nepotistic practice of abusing the power to appoint to satisfy their families and friends.

Ladies and gentlemen, our checks have revealed that there are over fifty (50) persons in the Akufo-Addo government, whose appointments can be related to their families, friends, business or close connections to Nana Akufo-Addo, Dr Bawumia, their Ministers and other appointees. This unprecedented but unenviable practice injures good governance, and breeds corruption.

Ladies and Gentlemen, below are but a few of the examples which demonstrate the classic and unprecedented nepotism that President Akufo-Addo is presiding over.

THE CLASSIC EXAMPLES OF NEPOTISM UNDER PRESIDENT AKUFO-ADDO

Ladies and gentlemen of the press, among Akufo-Addo’s uncountable relatives in government is Nana Asante Bediatuo, his cousin from Kyebi, who serves as his Executive Secretary. Bediatuo is not alone! He is joined in government by his father, Kofi Darko Asante, who chairs the Governing Council of GIMPA, his mother, Mrs. Vida Asante, who is the head of the Presidential Household and his brother, Kwesi Kuntu Asante, who sits on the Board of Ghana Hostels. In addition, Nana Asante Bediatuo’s sister, Lauretta Asante (marital name, Otchere), is one of the three Deputy Directors-General at SSNIT who have been appointed by this government.

Other relatives of President Akufo-Addo who currently occupy various positions in his government include, Ken Ofori Atta, Minister of Finance, Samuel Atta Akyea, Works and Housing Minister, and Kwesi Amoako Atta, Minister for Roads and Highways, all of whom are cousins of the President.

Friends from the media, in an unprecedented move, President Akufo-Addo has made his own daughter, Gyankroma Akufo-Addo, a member of the Creative Arts Council.

Ladies and Gentlemen, a major striking feature of Akufo-Addo’s nepotistic governance style is the ever present quartet made up of two appointees: Ken Ofori Atta, the Minister of Finance; and Duke Ofori Atta, brother of Ken Ofori Atta and a staffer at the office of the Chief of Staff, and also two non-appointees: The President’s younger brother, Edward ‘Akufo-Addo (Bumpty); and their nephew, Gabby Asare Okyere Darko – the de facto Prime Minister who per our sources, controls the President’s interests in government.

It must be noted that, even though ‘Bumpty’ and ‘Gabby’ do not hold formal positions in government, the two are the President’s closest advisors. Gabby, in particular, is considered as the most powerful man in the Akufo-Addo administration, second only to the President. Bumpty on the other hand, as revealed by our investigations, is the President’s main man in Ghana’s Energy sector with numerous interests.

Furthermore, the wife of Gabby Asare Otchere Darko, and in-law of the President, Nana Adjoa Hackman, is not left out of the sharing of the spoils, as she has been appointed to the Board of the GNPC – a key institution which pivots Ghana’s petroleum sector. Also, Mr. Ekow Hackman, brother of Gabby’s wife, Adjoa Hackman and hence Akufo-Addo’s son in law, has been appointed as the Board Chairman of BOST.

To add to the litany of familial relations of the President in government, and the unholy firm grip that the Akufo-Addo family has on the energy sector of Ghana, another cousin of the President, Rhodaline Baafour-Gyimah has been made a member of the Board of the Ghana Oil Company (GOIL). In addition, Mrs Baafour-Gyimah’s husband – a brother-in-law of the President – Mr. Alex Baafour Gyimah has also been rewarded for his relations with the President by being appointed to chair the Board of the Gaming Commission.

Also, another cousin of President Akufo-Addo, Nana Fredua Ofori Atta has been made Chairman of the National Theatre Board.

Ladies and gentlemen, in furtherance of his legendary practice of nepotism and clannism, Nana has not left out his paternal side from his distribution of state positions. Dr Edward Kwapong, the Chief Executive of the Fair Wages and Salaries Commission and the current Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Miss Gloria Akuffo are all paternal relatives of President Akufo-Addo.

Quite apart from the above-enumerated, President Akufo-Addo also has a long catalogue of relatives and friends deeply embedded at the Presidency. This was revealed after our careful perusal of the list of Presidential Staffers presented to Parliament early last year. Among them is his nephew, Michael Ofori Atta, who operates under the title of Director of ECOWAS. It is very puzzling to us what this role entails, given the fact that the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration already has able hands to handle the affairs of the sub-regional body on behalf of the government of Ghana.

Still on the unprecedented list of Presidential staffers which has sent many tongues wagging for some time now, is another nephew of the President, William Ofori Atta, who bears the title of an “office assistant”, while yet another relative of the President, Alice Ofori Atta, has also been drafted in as a “protocol officer” at the Presidency.

In a move to further entrench nepotism, contrary to his euphonious rhetoric whilst in opposition, a relative of the first lady, Mrs. Rebecca Akufo-Addo, who goes by the name Gabriella Arafua Reindolf, has also found space on the gargantuan list of Presidential staffers as “Deputy Director, Hospitality”.

Furthermore, both Akosua Newman and Victor Newman her husband have been appointed to the presidency. Victor Newman is another paternal relative and long-standing associate of President Akufo-Addo. Whereas he is currently a Senior Presidential Advisor, his wife serves as an “Executive Assistant” at the Presidency. 

Still on the record-breaking list of staffers is Shirley Laryea, who has been appointed as an Assistant Office Administrator at the Office of the President. Her husband, Mr. Gaddy Laryea is a known long-standing friend of the President.

Ladies and gentlemen, in what comes across to us as a romantic twist to this tale of family and friends, President Akufo-Addo has made Madam Virginia Hesse, who is known to have a daughter with him, Ghana’s ambassador to the Czech Republic.

Clearly, President Akufo-Addo has shown that he is not a man of his words and cannot be trusted.

Friends from the inky fraternity, several high-ranking officials in this government have taken a cue from the president in this very unenviable practice. One of such is the Finance Minister and cousin to the President, Ken Ofori Atta, who has also assembled a cast of close friends, relatives and business partners in many public financial institutions in order to have an unparalleled influence over the sector.

For example, a sister-in-law of the Finance Minister, Eno Ofori Attah, has been made Deputy Managing Director of SIC Financial Services, while another family relative by name Alice Ofori Atta, currently heads the Tema Development Corporation (TDC).

To further strengthen his hold over Ghana’s financial sector, Daniel Ogbarmey Tetteh, a known protégé of the Finance Minister, has been appointed to the position of Director-General of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). It must be added, that Ogbarmey Tetteh is a former Vice President of Data Bank, co-owned by Ken Ofori Atta.

Another former staff of Databank, Deila Awo Assimeh, a Company Secretary to Data Bank, has also been rewarded as a member of the SEC Board.

There is no gainsaying that these two acolytes of the Finance Minister have been strategically placed to make it very difficult, if not impossible to hold the Finance Minister to account for any aberrations of the law regarding the SEC. Therefore, it is not surprising to the financial sector in Ghana and to us in the NDC that Databank is almost always deemed worthy transaction advisors to the Finance Minister in most of our recent issuance of sovereign bonds. To all intents and purposes, the operations of Databank, which is co-owned by the Finance Minister, Ken Ofori Atta, now extends into the domain of the Finance Ministry, which he heads.

Distinguished Ladies and gentlemen, the despicable practice of nepotism by the Akufo-Addo government has assumed perhaps a bigger centre stage at the Finance Ministry. Our investigations have revealed that Hon. Ken Ofori Atta, who heads that Ministry, has supplanted a number of highly-qualified and seasoned technocrats, and in their stead, placed middle level cronies from Databank to occupy top roles responsible for implementing government’s economic and financial policies.

One of such persons is his nephew, Michael Asare Bediako, who has been planted as his Special Assistant at the Ministry.

Other erstwhile Databank staff who now sit comfortably at the Finance Ministry and other agencies under it include Ernest Akore, a former non-executive director at Databank, who is now a Board Member of the Ghana Revenue Authority. Another is Sampson Akligoh, who was once a Vice President at Databank in charge of Research. He now heads the Financial Sector Division of the Finance Ministry.

Others include Felicia Gyamfi Ashley, a former Human Resource manager at Databank who is now a member of the Entity Tender Committee of the Finance Ministry, and Ntiwaa Daaku Kwakye, also a former staff of Databank who has also been fixed at the Finance Ministry.

This brazen nepotism has obviously incurred the wrath of many senior staff of the Finance Ministry, who are incensed by the continuous recruitment of several Databank staff at the Ministry.

Ladies and Gentlemen, Need I add more?

Even Charles Adu Boahen, one of the three Deputy Ministers at the Finance Ministry, has arguably more than a mere working relationship in government with the Finance Minister. His business partnership with Ken Ofori Atta dates back to the purchase of shares in Enterprise Group previously held by Sanlam, a South African investment firm, by Black Star Holdings Limited, a company which was founded by Hon. Adu Boahen. These two men now have an opportunity to continue drinking from the same pot at the Finance Ministry.

Indeed, the Finance Minister, Ken Ofori Atta who recently infamously described innocent investors in Menzgold as “greedy”, continues to exhibit arguably the obscenest avarice ever witnessed in our political annals.

Apart from the above examples, the Finance Minister has additional sea of strategically-placed allies in key state financial institutions, with whom he shares close ties of friendship and business interests.

Among them include Keli Gadzekpo, a long-standing acolyte and co-founder of Databank and head of the Enterprise Group, and Madam Comfort Ocran, both of whom now sit comfortably on the Bank of Ghana Board – the Board which has engineered the collapse of 420 financial institutions and rendered thousands of breadwinners jobless. Keli Gadzekpo also doubles as chairman of the ECG Board of Directors.

Another associate of the Finance Minister, by name Lynn Allotey Gadzekpo, sister-in-law of Keli Gadzekpo, has also been appointed to the Bank of Ghana Board. Also, on the prestigious Board of the Bank of Ghana is Dr. Kwame Owusu Nyantakyi, a brother- in- law of the President (married to the First Lady’s sister).

Others among the Databank cohort are Yoofi Grant, current CEO of the Ghana Investment Promotion Centre, who between 2009 and 2012 was an Executive Director in charge of Business Development and Private Equity Division at Databank. Yet another former Databank employee, is Michael Addotey Addo, who is now a Deputy Director-General at SSNIT.

Ladies and gentlemen, it is very instructive to note that in sharing the spoils of power to family, friends and loved ones, the Vice President Dr. Bawumia neither opposed it nor recused himself. Dr. Bawumia’s father-in-law (father of Second Lady, Samira Bawumia), Alhaji Ahmed Ramadan, has been made Ghana’s envoy to the United Arab Emirates. We also must add, that Alhaji Ramadan’s son; who is Dr Bawumia’s brother in-law has also been appointed as a Deputy Director-General of NADMO. Additionally, Mumuni Abdulai Bawumia, a brother of Vice President Bawumia, has been appointed as Technical Advisor to the Interior Minister, Hon. Ambrose Derry.

Learning from President Akufo-Addo and Bawumia, various ministers of state in this government have also diligently followed these shameful footsteps of their bosses by also dispensing generosity to their families and friends. 

Beyond Akufo-Addo, Bawumia and Ken Ofori-Atta, specifically, the man who actually leads this pack is the Senior Minister, ‘friend’ and defender of Aisha Huang of China, Mr Yaw Osafo Marfo. Even though Mr Osafo Marfo discouraged NPP footsoldiers and the youth of Ghana from seeking jobs in the public sector because it is choked, his two sons are comfortably serving in the public sector.

Ladies and Gentlemen, these privileged sons are: Kwadwo Gyamfi Osafo Marfo, who now serves as Deputy Director-General and Acting Head of Cyber Security at the NCA, and Kofi Bosompem Osafo Marfo (also his son), who is now a Deputy Director-General of SSNIT.

Let’s stay a little while longer at the National Communications Authority. The Hon. Minister of Communications, Ursula Owusu Ekuful, has conveniently fixed two of her allies, namely Olivia Quartey and Prince Sefah, as Deputy Directors-General in charge of Managerial Operations and Operations respectively. It still remains a mystery as to what these two nebulous roles actually entail within the scheme of things of the NCA.

By the same token, the Director General of the NCA – Joe Anokye, has not stopped short of drafting several of his apparatchiks into various positions at the Authority. These include but not limited to: Kwame Gyan, Nathan Musah, Collinson Nii Clottey Oko, Charles Ronald Sanny, Nelly Debrah, Josephine Adu-Fowaa and Harry Mcninson.

Friends from the media, over and above these despicable nepotistic appointments, at the Party level, the wife of the National Chairman, Freddy Blay (Gina Blay), is now Ghana’s Ambassador to Germany, while the son of the speaker of Parliament, Mike Ocquaye Jnr, is Ghana’s representative to India. Our investigations also revealed that the Speaker’s daughter, Maria Edith Ocquaye, has recently been made the Head of Corporate Affairs for the National Petroleum Authority

Also, Akosua Manu, daughter in law of Peter Mac-Manu, Board Chair of the GPHA and Former Chairman of the NPP has also been appointed as Deputy CEO of the National Youth Authority.

Last but not least, at the Fisheries Ministry sits the ever-present Hon. Elizabeth Afoley Quaye (MP), under whose watch about GHS22 million worth of premix fuel was defalcated in a massive scandal in 2017. Indeed in 2017 alone she superintended over about 200 cases of premix fuel diversion. At the heart of these stinking scandals was her brother, Joseph Botchwey, whom she appointed as Administrator of the National Premix Secretariat. He functions alongside her nephew, Elikem Sewordor, who is the Southern Volta Coordinator of the Premix Secretariat.

NEPOTISTIC BUSINESS DEALINGS

Ladies and gentlemen of the media, a natural consequence of this unprecedented level of nepotism, is total state capture. Beyond planting his relatives and close friends in top positions, President Akufo-Addo has opened up the public purse for total scramble by these family and friends. He has ensured their total dominance of several sectors of the Ghanaian economy to the detriment of other Ghanaians who are better qualified and in a much better position to execute government jobs.

The object of this is to enrich himself and his close relatives contrary to his claim that he did not come to power to enrich himself.

In some instances, contracts and jobs won legitimately by genuine contractors and service providers have been taken away from them and given to relatives of the President.

For the sake of brevity, we will provide just a few examples to buttress this point.

1. HOW PRESIDENT AKUFO-ADDO TOOK OIL SUPPLY CONTRACTS FROM BOST AND GAVE IT TO A COMPANY ASSOCIATED WITH HIS BROTHER, BUMPTY.

When President Akufo-Addo came to office in January, 2017, Goil and other state entities in the petroleum sector were supplied finished products by BOST, a state-owned entity. As soon as President Akufo-Addo took office, a company called Stratcon Energy, was hurriedly formed in 2017 and has taken over the supply of oil products to GOIL, BOST, TOR and VRA.

If you are wondering, ladies and gentlemen, how a company formed only in 2017 can secure this lucrative contract to supply oil to all these state entities, look no further. Stracon Energy is owned by the husband of Adeline Akufo-Addo, daughter of President Akufo-Addo’s brother Edward ‘Bumpty’ Akufo-Addo. Only this familial connection with President Akufo-Addo could have guaranteed this deal.

2. HOW PRESIDENT AKUFO-ADDO GAVE PUBLIC FUNDS TO HIS BROTHER IN LAW TO INVEST IN A HOTEL PROJECT.

In December, 2018, President Akufo-Addo allowed the state-owned Ghana Infrastructure and Investment Fund (GIIF) to partly finance a private hotel project being undertaken by his brother in law, Dr Kwame Nyantakyi Owusu (married to the President’s wife’s sister) at the Airport City in Accra. This is one more example of the sort of nepotism and cronyism being practiced by President Akufo-Addo.

Ladies and gentlemen, the above are but a few of the monstrous levels of nepotism taking place in the family and friend’s government of President Akufo-Addo.

The question is: where did ‘Ama’ Ghana go wrong? What sin has Ghanaians committed to be subjected to such crude governance which Idi Amin Dada – the Butcher of Uganda, Jean-Bedel Bokassa and Mobutu Sese Seko – the looter of Zaire never dreamt of?

CONCLUSION

Ladies and gentlemen, as I have already indicated, the classic and numerous examples of nepotism cited are but a few of the plethora of family, friends, loved ones and cronies’ appointments which have characterised the deceptive and corrupt Akufo-Addo government.

It is clear that, President Akufo-Addo has made nepotism a deliberate policy in his administration and we can safely say without any equivocation that, the Akufo-Addo government is the most nepotistic in the world.

These family and friends’ appointments have also exposed the hollowness and deceptive nature of the President’s infamous rhetoric in Kumasi, in 2016, when he vowed not to operate a family and friends’ government. Simply put, President Akufo-Addo has failed to translate his words into action. His style of governance continues to expose his weaknesses with each passing day.

Ladies and Gentlemen, we have brought these to your attention for Ghanaians to see the extent of abuse that President Akufo-Addo has subjected the public purse to. Apart from having an extraordinarily-bloated government with 124 Ministers and over 1000 Presidential staffers, he appears to have made family connections a key pre-requisite for appointments into his government.

This has predictably spawned several conflicts of interest situations, clear acts of corruption, victimization of existing businesses, arm twisting and extortion. Indeed, the business community is on its knees and at the mercy of these family and friends’ cliques.

Thus, the festering culture of patronage and corruption ongoing in this Akufo-Addo/Bawumia government does not come as a surprise at all. The rising corruption we are witnessing today is truly and inextricably linked to the excessive practice of nepotism by President Akufo-Addo. His inability to crack the whip on his errant and corrupt officials cannot be divorced from the ties of family and friendship that binds him and his appointees together. The biggest question for us therefore is, how can our nation overcome corruption when our President practices one of its inseparable bedfellows called nepotism? Your guess is as good as mine.

It is our hope that over and above what many Ghanaians know already, these revelations will dawn on Ghanaians, that President Akufo-Addo, contrary to his lofty and dovish rhetoric in opposition, is supervising the capture of the state in furtherance of familial interest. All the desperate attempt made to shield him from public scrutiny and the sanctimonious claims of incorruptibility are but a tenuous smokescreen behind which real damage is being done to our nation.

Anti-Nepotism Law

Ladies and Gentlemen, in view of the institutionalization of nepotism by President Akufo-Addo, the enactment of an anti-nepotism legislation to help check abuse of political power in the advancement of the nepotistic agenda of President Akufo-Addo, his acolytes and any unforeseen recurrence is long overdue in Ghana.

This law, can take the form, and even be an improvement of section 3110 of title 5, of the United States Code, which forbids a public official from appointing a relative to a civilian position in the agency over which that official exercises jurisdiction or control.

To this end, we call on Civil Society Organisations and all well-meaning Ghanaians to join us, as we advocate the initiation and passage of an Anti-Nepotism Law for Ghana.

We contend that, notwithstanding the enormous constitutional powers conferred on the President to hire and fire, such powers must not be exercised in a whimsical manner in furtherance of the interest of family members, friends and cronies. And, we believe that the time has come for Ghana to enact an Anti-Nepotism law that imposes clear restrictions on the employment of close relatives, as it’s done in other jurisdictions.

Thank you for coming and may God continue to bless our homeland Ghana.

Signed.

SAMMY GYAMFI

National Communication Officer

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Full statement: NDC names Akufo-Addo’s family and friends in govt https://www.adomonline.com/full-statement-ndc-names-akufo-addos-family-and-friends-in-govt/ Tue, 05 Nov 2019 16:09:48 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=1718456 The opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC) is calling for an anti-nepotism law to prevent the president from appointing close relatives into government.

This call follows what it says is the institutionalism of nepotism under the Akufo-Addo government.

At a news conference addressed by the NDC’s National Communication Officer, Sammy Gyamfi, the party listed over 15 family members of the President appointed to key positions in government to buttress its point.

This, Mr Gyamfi said, was enough attestation that indeed President Akufo-Addo has given true meaning to nepotism by surrounding himself with a plethora of family members, friends, loved ones including his former lovers all in furtherance of his State-capture agenda.

“Akufo-Addo/Bawumia government is the most nepotistic government in the 62-year history of Ghana and we dare say, the world. Even Idi Amin Dada – the Butcher of Uganda, Jean-Bedel Bokassa and Mobutu Sese Seko – the looter of Zaire (now Democratic Republic of Congo) will envy President Akufo-Addo’s unprecedented brand of nepotism and clannism,” he said.

READ THE FULL STATEMENT BELOW:

A MOMENT OF TRUTH PRESS CONFERENCE ON THE UNPRECEDENTED NEPOTISM UNDER PRESIDENT AKUFO-ADDO, ADDRESSED BY THE NATIONAL COMMUNICATION OFFICER OF THE NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC CONGRESS (NDC), COMRADE SAMMY GYAMFI.

Tuesday, 5th November 2019

INTRODUCTION
Good morning to you all, distinguished ladies and gentlemen of the press. On behalf of the National Democratic Congress, I welcome you to the Sixth edition of the Moment of Truth series. As always, we thank you for honouring this invitation despite your busy schedules.
These regular engagements, afford us the opportunity to critically assess the performance of the deceptive and corrupt Akufo-Addo government in all areas of our national life – by separating truths from lies, facts from fiction, and good governance from bad governance in order to help Ghanaians demand accountability from their duty bearers.
Friends from the media, this afternoon, we shall discuss a very important subject. One that is not only critical to good governance, but also fundamental to the fight against corruption. We shall talk about nepotism – The ongoing Family and Friends governance of President Akufo-Addo and its disastrous effects on Ghana.

NEPOTISM
Simply defined, nepotism is the practice among those with power or influence of favouring relatives or friends, especially by giving them jobs. The practice is considered to be unethical, largely due to its conflict with the values of fairness and good governance. In governance, nepotism is even more dangerous due to its potential to compromise transparency and the fight against corruption as we have seen under this Akufo-Addo government.
Friends from the media, after our meticulous investigations into appointments made by President Akufo-Addo since the year 2017, we submit that the Akufo-Addo/Bawumia government is the most nepotistic government in the sixty-two-year history of Ghana and we dare say, the world. Even Idi Amin Dada – the Butcher of Uganda, Jean-Bedel Bokassa and Mobutu Sese Seko – the looter of Zaire (now Democratic Republic of Congo) will envy President Akufo-Addo’s unprecedented brand of nepotism and clannism.

CANDIDATE AKUFO-ADDO’s FALSE ALLEGATION AGAINST PRESIDENT MAHAMA AND HIS FAKE PROMISE IN 2016

Members of the inky fraternity, it is important at this stage to give a brief historical context to this whole discussion about nepotism.

You may recall, that at an NPP Delegates Conference in Kumasi on Saturday, 17 January, 2016, then Flagbearer of the New Patriotic Party (NPP), Nana Akufo-Addo, made a solemn promise to the people of Ghana that, “I will not operate a family and friends’ government.” At that meeting, the NPP leader chided then President John Mahama for running what he called “a family and friends’ government,” and promised that should he win power, he will not operate same.
It is instructive to note, that at the time the current President was accusing former President Mahama of running a family and friends’ government, the NDC government, then, had only one appointee with any form of familial relations with the former President. That appointee was Hon. Joyce Bawa Mogtari (former Deputy Minister of Transport and a distant cousin to the former President).
Despite this notorious fact which was known to candidate Akufo-Addo, so loud were the accusations of nepotism against the erstwhile NDC administration, that Prof. Stephen Adei (a friend of Akufo-Addo, former Rector of GIMPA and now Chairman of the NDPC) had cause to accuse former President Mahama of running a government full of what he called “northerners”.
Distinguished friends from the media, as fate will have it, the man who accused the decent NDC administration of nepotism, now occupies the highest office of the land, and has a chance to keep his own vow made to Ghanaians in 2016. And what do we see? His promise not to operate a family and friends’ government now lies in tatters; trampled upon with indescribable contempt.
NEPOTISM: A DELIBERATE POLICY UNDER PRESIDENT AKUFO-ADDO
Indeed, contrary to his campaign promise, President Akufo-Addo has normalized the culture of nepotism in his government. He has given true meaning to nepotism by surrounding himself with a plethora of family members, friends, loved ones including his former lovers all in furtherance of his state-capture agenda.
President Akufo-Addo has equated his powers conferred on him by the 1992 Constitution to hire and fire, to mean excessively and capriciously dispensing generosity to family, friends, kinsmen and loved ones. With flippant abuse of his powers and privileges as President of Ghana, he has appointed such people into various juicy positions in his government in a way never seen in the history of this country.
Similarly, the Vice President, Dr Mahamudu Bawumia, and other key government functionaries have also joined the President in this race to the bottom. Taking a cue from their boss, they have joined the nepotistic practice of abusing the power to appoint to satisfy their families and friends.
Ladies and gentlemen, our checks have revealed that there are over fifty (50) persons in the Akufo-Addo government, whose appointments can be related to their families, friends, business or close connections to Nana Akufo-Addo, Dr Bawumia, their Ministers and other appointees. This unprecedented but unenviable practice injures good governance, and breeds corruption.
Ladies and Gentlemen, below are but a few of the examples which demonstrate the classic and unprecedented nepotism that President Akufo-Addo is presiding over.

THE CLASSIC EXAMPLES OF NEPOTISM UNDER PRESIDENT AKUFO-ADDO
Ladies and gentlemen of the press, among Akufo-Addo’s uncountable relatives in government is Nana Asante Bediatuo, his cousin from Kyebi, who serves as his Executive Secretary. Bediatuo is not alone! He is joined in government by his father, Kofi Darko Asante, who chairs the Governing Council of GIMPA, his mother, Mrs. Vida Asante, who is the head of the Presidential Household and his brother, Kwesi Kuntu Asante, who sits on the Board of Ghana Hostels. In addition, Nana Asante Bediatuo’s sister, Lauretta Asante (marital name, Otchere), is one of the three Deputy Directors-General at SSNIT who have been appointed by this government.
Other relatives of President Akufo-Addo who currently occupy various positions in his government include, Ken Ofori-Atta, Minister of Finance, Samuel Atta Akyea, Works and Housing Minister, and Kwesi Amoako Atta, Minister for Roads and Highways, all of whom are cousins of the President.
Friends from the media, in an unprecedented move, President Akufo-Addo has made his own daughter, Gyankroma Akufo-Addo, a member of the Creative Arts Council.
Ladies and Gentlemen, a major striking feature of Akufo-Addo’s nepotistic governance style is the ever present quartet made up of two appointees: Ken Ofori-Atta, the Minister of Finance; and Duke Ofori-Atta, brother of Ken Ofori-Atta and a staffer at the office of the Chief of Staff, and also two non-appointees: The President’s younger brother, Edward ‘Akufo-Addo (Bumpty); and their nephew, Gabby Asare Otchere-Darko – the de facto Prime Minister who per our sources, controls the President’s interests in government.
It must be noted that, even though ‘Bumpty’ and ‘Gabby’ do not hold formal positions in government, the two are the President’s closest advisors. Gabby, in particular, is considered as the most powerful man in the Akufo-Addo administration, second only to the President. Bumpty on the other hand, as revealed by our investigations, is the President’s main man in Ghana’s Energy sector with numerous interests.
Furthermore, the wife of Gabby Asare Otchere-Darko, and in-law of the President, Nana Adjoa Hackman, is not left out of the sharing of the spoils, as she has been appointed to the Board of the GNPC – a key institution which pivots Ghana’s petroleum sector. Also, Mr Ekow Hackman, brother of Gabby’s wife, Adjoa Hackman and hence Akufo-Addo’s son in law, has been appointed as the Board Chairman of BOST.
To add to the litany of familial relations of the President in government, and the unholy firm grip that the Akufo-Addo family has on the energy sector of Ghana, another cousin of the President, Rhodaline Baafour-Gyimah has been made a member of the Board of the Ghana Oil Company (GOIL). In addition, Mrs Baafour-Gyimah’s husband – a brother-in-law of the President – Mr. Alex Baafour Gyimah has also been rewarded for his relations with the President by being appointed to chair the Board of the Gaming Commission.
Also, another cousin of President Akufo-Addo, Nana Fredua Ofori Atta has been made Chairman of the National Theatre Board.
Ladies and gentlemen, in furtherance of his legendary practice of nepotism and clannism, Nana has not left out his paternal side from his distribution of state positions. Dr Edward Kwapong, the Chief Executive of the Fair Wages and Salaries Commission and the current Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Miss Gloria Akuffo are all paternal relatives of President Akufo-Addo.
Quite apart from the above-enumerated, President Akufo-Addo also has a long catalogue of relatives and friends deeply embedded at the Presidency. This was revealed after our careful perusal of the list of Presidential Staffers presented to Parliament early last year. Among them is his nephew, Michael Ofori Atta, who operates under the title of Director of ECOWAS. It is very puzzling to us what this role entails, given the fact that the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration already has able hands to handle the affairs of the sub-regional body on behalf of the government of Ghana.
Still on the unprecedented list of Presidential staffers which has sent many tongues wagging for some time now, is another nephew of the President, William Ofori Atta, who bears the title of an “office assistant”, while yet another relative of the President, Alice Ofori Atta, has also been drafted in as a “protocol officer” at the Presidency.
In a move to further entrench nepotism, contrary to his euphonious rhetoric whilst in opposition, a relative of the first lady, Mrs. Rebecca Akufo-Addo, who goes by the name Gabriella Arafua Reindolf, has also found space on the gargantuan list of Presidential staffers as “Deputy Director, Hospitality”.
Furthermore, both Akosua Newman and Victor Newman her husband have been appointed to the presidency. Victor Newman is another paternal relative and long-standing associate of President Akufo-Addo. Whereas he is currently a Senior Presidential Advisor, his wife serves as an “Executive Assistant” at the Presidency.
Still on the record-breaking list of staffers is Shirley Laryea, who has been appointed as an Assistant Office Administrator at the Office of the President. Her husband, Mr. Gaddy Laryea is a known long-standing friend of the President.
Ladies and gentlemen, in what comes across to us as a romantic twist to this tale of family and friends, President Akufo-Addo has made Madam Virginia Hesse, who is known to have a daughter with him, Ghana’s ambassador to the Czech Republic.
Clearly, President Akufo-Addo has shown that he is not a man of his words and cannot be trusted.
Friends from the inky fraternity, several high-ranking officials in this government have taken a cue from the president in this very unenviable practice. One of such is the Finance Minister and cousin to the President, Ken Ofori Atta, who has also assembled a cast of close friends, relatives and business partners in many public financial institutions in order to have an unparalleled influence over the sector.
For example, a sister-in-law of the Finance Minister, Eno Ofori Attah, has been made Deputy Managing Director of SIC Financial Services, while another family relative by name Alice Ofori Atta, currently heads the Tema Development Corporation (TDC).
To further strengthen his hold over Ghana’s financial sector, Daniel Ogbarmey Tetteh, a known protégé of the Finance Minister, has been appointed to the position of Director-General of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). It must be added, that Ogbarmey Tetteh is a former Vice President of Data Bank, co-owned by Ken Ofori Atta.
Another former staff of Databank, Deila Awo Assimeh, a Company Secretary to Data Bank, has also been rewarded as a member of the SEC Board.
There is no gainsaying that these two acolytes of the Finance Minister have been strategically placed to make it very difficult, if not impossible to hold the Finance Minister to account for any aberrations of the law regarding the SEC. Therefore, it is not surprising to the financial sector in Ghana and to us in the NDC that Databank is almost always deemed worthy transaction advisors to the Finance Minister in most of our recent issuance of sovereign bonds. To all intents and purposes, the operations of Databank, which is co-owned by the Finance Minister, Ken Ofori Atta, now extends into the domain of the Finance Ministry, which he heads.
Distinguished Ladies and gentlemen, the despicable practice of nepotism by the Akufo-Addo government has assumed perhaps a bigger centre stage at the Finance Ministry. Our investigations have revealed that Hon. Ken Ofori Atta, who heads that Ministry, has supplanted a number of highly-qualified and seasoned technocrats, and in their stead, placed middle level cronies from Databank to occupy top roles responsible for implementing government’s economic and financial policies.
One of such persons is his nephew, Michael Asare Bediako, who has been planted as his Special Assistant at the Ministry.
Other erstwhile Databank staff who now sit comfortably at the Finance Ministry and other agencies under it include Ernest Akore, a former non-executive director at Databank, who is now a Board Member of the Ghana Revenue Authority. Another is Sampson Akligoh, who was once a Vice President at Databank in charge of Research. He now heads the Financial Sector Division of the Finance Ministry.
Others include Felicia Gyamfi Ashley, a former Human Resource manager at Databank who is now a member of the Entity Tender Committee of the Finance Ministry, and Ntiwaa Daaku Kwakye, also a former staff of Databank who has also been fixed at the Finance Ministry.
This brazen nepotism has obviously incurred the wrath of many senior staff of the Finance Ministry, who are incensed by the continuous recruitment of several Databank staff at the Ministry.
Ladies and Gentlemen, Need I add more?
Even Charles Adu Boahen, one of the three Deputy Ministers at the Finance Ministry, has arguably more than a mere working relationship in government with the Finance Minister. His business partnership with Ken Ofori Atta dates back to the purchase of shares in Enterprise Group previously held by Sanlam, a South African investment firm, by Black Star Holdings Limited, a company which was founded by Hon. Adu Boahen. These two men now have an opportunity to continue drinking from the same pot at the Finance Ministry.
Indeed, the Finance Minister, Ken Ofori Atta who recently infamously described innocent investors in Menzgold as “greedy”, continues to exhibit arguably the obscenest avarice ever witnessed in our political annals.
Apart from the above examples, the Finance Minister has additional sea of strategically-placed allies in key state financial institutions, with whom he shares close ties of friendship and business interests.
Among them include Keli Gadzekpo, a long-standing acolyte and co-founder of Databank and head of the Enterprise Group, and Madam Comfort Ocran, both of whom now sit comfortably on the Bank of Ghana Board – the Board which has engineered the collapse of 420 financial institutions and rendered thousands of breadwinners jobless. Keli Gadzekpo also doubles as chairman of the ECG Board of Directors.
Another associate of the Finance Minister, by name Lynn Allotey Gadzekpo, sister-in-law of Keli Gadzekpo, has also been appointed to the Bank of Ghana Board. Also, on the prestigious Board of the Bank of Ghana is Dr. Kwame Owusu Nyantakyi, a brother- in- law of the President (married to the First Lady’s sister).
Others among the Databank cohort are Yoofi Grant, current CEO of the Ghana Investment Promotion Centre, who between 2009 and 2012 was an Executive Director in charge of Business Development and Private Equity Division at Databank. Yet another former Databank employee, is Michael Addotey Addo, who is now a Deputy Director-General at SSNIT.
Ladies and gentlemen, it is very instructive to note that in sharing the spoils of power to family, friends and loved ones, the Vice President Dr. Bawumia neither opposed it nor recused himself. Dr. Bawumia’s father-in-law (father of Second Lady, Samira Bawumia), Alhaji Ahmed Ramadan, has been made Ghana’s envoy to the United Arab Emirates. We also must add, that Alhaji Ramadan’s son; who is Dr Bawumia’s brother in-law has also been appointed as a Deputy Director-General of NADMO. Additionally, Mumuni Abdulai Bawumia, a brother of Vice President Bawumia, has been appointed as Technical Advisor to the Interior Minister, Hon. Ambrose Derry.
Learning from President Akufo-Addo and Bawumia, various ministers of state in this government have also diligently followed these shameful footsteps of their bosses by also dispensing generosity to their families and friends.
Beyond Akufo-Addo, Bawumia and Ken Ofori-Atta, specifically, the man who actually leads this pack is the Senior Minister, ‘friend’ and defender of Aisha Huang of China, Mr Yaw Osafo Marfo. Even though Mr Osafo Marfo discouraged NPP footsoldiers and the youth of Ghana from seeking jobs in the public sector because it is choked, his two sons are comfortably serving in the public sector.
Ladies and Gentlemen, these privileged sons are: Kwadwo Gyamfi Osafo Marfo, who now serves as Deputy Director-General and Acting Head of Cyber Security at the NCA, and Kofi Bosompem Osafo Marfo (also his son), who is now a Deputy Director-General of SSNIT.
Let’s stay a little while longer at the National Communications Authority. The Hon. Minister of Communications, Ursula Owusu Ekuful, has conveniently fixed two of her allies, namely Olivia Quartey and Prince Sefah, as Deputy Directors-General in charge of Managerial Operations and Operations respectively. It still remains a mystery as to what these two nebulous roles actually entail within the scheme of things of the NCA.
By the same token, the Director General of the NCA – Joe Anokye, has not stopped short of drafting several of his apparatchiks into various positions at the Authority. These include but not limited to: Kwame Gyan, Nathan Musah, Collinson Nii Clottey Oko, Charles Ronald Sanny, Nelly Debrah, Josephine Adu-Fowaa and Harry Mcninson.
Friends from the media, over and above these despicable nepotistic appointments, at the Party level, the wife of the National Chairman, Freddy Blay (Gina Blay), is now Ghana’s Ambassador to Germany, while the son of the speaker of Parliament, Mike Ocquaye Jnr, is Ghana’s representative to India. Our investigations also revealed that the Speaker’s daughter, Maria Edith Ocquaye, has recently been made the Head of Corporate Affairs for the National Petroleum Authority
Also, Akosua Manu, daughter in law of Peter Mac-Manu, Board Chair of the GPHA and Former Chairman of the NPP has also been appointed as Deputy CEO of the National Youth Authority.
Last but not least, at the Fisheries Ministry sits the ever-present Hon. Elizabeth Afoley Quaye (MP), under whose watch about GHS22 million worth of premix fuel was defalcated in a massive scandal in 2017. Indeed in 2017 alone she superintended over about 200 cases of premix fuel diversion. At the heart of these stinking scandals was her brother, Joseph Botchwey, whom she appointed as Administrator of the National Premix Secretariat. He functions alongside her nephew, Elikem Sewordor, who is the Southern Volta Coordinator of the Premix Secretariat.
NEPOTISTIC BUSINESS DEALINGS
Ladies and gentlemen of the media, a natural consequence of this unprecedented level of nepotism, is total state capture. Beyond planting his relatives and close friends in top positions, President Akufo-Addo has opened up the public purse for total scramble by these family and friends. He has ensured their total dominance of several sectors of the Ghanaian economy to the detriment of other Ghanaians who are better qualified and in a much better position to execute government jobs.
The object of this is to enrich himself and his close relatives contrary to his claim that he did not come to power to enrich himself.
In some instances, contracts and jobs won legitimately by genuine contractors and service providers have been taken away from them and given to relatives of the President.
For the sake of brevity, we will provide just a few examples to buttress this point.

  1. HOW PRESIDENT AKUFO-ADDO TOOK OIL SUPPLY CONTRACTS FROM BOST AND GAVE IT TO A COMPANY ASSOCIATED WITH HIS BROTHER, BUMPTY.
    When President Akufo-Addo came to office in January, 2017, Goil and other state entities in the petroleum sector were supplied finished products by BOST, a state-owned entity. As soon as President Akufo-Addo took office, a company called Stratcon Energy, was hurriedly formed in 2017 and has taken over the supply of oil products to GOIL, BOST, TOR and VRA.
    If you are wondering, ladies and gentlemen, how a company formed only in 2017 can secure this lucrative contract to supply oil to all these state entities, look no further. Stracon Energy is owned by the husband of Adeline Akufo-Addo, daughter of President Akufo-Addo’s brother Edward ‘Bumpty’ Akufo-Addo. Only this familial connection with President Akufo-Addo could have guaranteed this deal.
  2. HOW PRESIDENT AKUFO-ADDO GAVE PUBLIC FUNDS TO HIS BROTHER IN LAW TO INVEST IN A HOTEL PROJECT.
    In December, 2018, President Akufo-Addo allowed the state-owned Ghana Infrastructure and Investment Fund (GIIF) to partly finance a private hotel project being undertaken by his brother in law, Dr Kwame Nyantakyi Owusu (married to the President’s wife’s sister) at the Airport City in Accra. This is one more example of the sort of nepotism and cronyism being practiced by President Akufo-Addo.
    Ladies and gentlemen, the above are but a few of the monstrous levels of nepotism taking place in the family and friend’s government of President Akufo-Addo.
    The question is: where did ‘Ama’ Ghana go wrong? What sin has Ghanaians committed to be subjected to such crude governance which Idi Amin Dada – the Butcher of Uganda, Jean-Bedel Bokassa and Mobutu Sese Seko – the looter of Zaire never dreamt of?
    CONCLUSION
    Ladies and gentlemen, as I have already indicated, the classic and numerous examples of nepotism cited are but a few of the plethora of family, friends, loved ones and cronies’ appointments which have characterised the deceptive and corrupt Akufo-Addo government.
    It is clear that, President Akufo-Addo has made nepotism a deliberate policy in his administration and we can safely say without any equivocation that, the Akufo-Addo government is the most nepotistic in the world.
    These family and friends’ appointments have also exposed the hollowness and deceptive nature of the President’s infamous rhetoric in Kumasi, in 2016, when he vowed not to operate a family and friends’ government. Simply put, President Akufo-Addo has failed to translate his words into action. His style of governance continues to expose his weaknesses with each passing day.
    Ladies and Gentlemen, we have brought these to your attention for Ghanaians to see the extent of abuse that President Akufo-Addo has subjected the public purse to. Apart from having an extraordinarily-bloated government with 124 Ministers and over 1000 Presidential staffers, he appears to have made family connections a key pre-requisite for appointments into his government.
    This has predictably spawned several conflicts of interest situations, clear acts of corruption, victimization of existing businesses, arm twisting and extortion. Indeed, the business community is on its knees and at the mercy of these family and friends’ cliques.
    Thus, the festering culture of patronage and corruption ongoing in this Akufo-Addo/Bawumia government does not come as a surprise at all. The rising corruption we are witnessing today is truly and inextricably linked to the excessive practice of nepotism by President Akufo-Addo. His inability to crack the whip on his errant and corrupt officials cannot be divorced from the ties of family and friendship that binds him and his appointees together. The biggest question for us therefore is, how can our nation overcome corruption when our President practices one of its inseparable bedfellows called nepotism? Your guess is as good as mine.
    It is our hope that over and above what many Ghanaians know already, these revelations will dawn on Ghanaians, that President Akufo-Addo, contrary to his lofty and dovish rhetoric in opposition, is supervising the capture of the state in furtherance of familial interest. All the desperate attempt made to shield him from public scrutiny and the sanctimonious claims of incorruptibility are but a tenuous smokescreen behind which real damage is being done to our nation.

Anti-Nepotism Law
Ladies and Gentlemen, in view of the institutionalization of nepotism by President Akufo-Addo, the enactment of an anti-nepotism legislation to help check abuse of political power in the advancement of the nepotistic agenda of President Akufo-Addo, his acolytes and any unforeseen recurrence is long overdue in Ghana.
This law, can take the form, and even be an improvement of section 3110 of title 5, of the United States Code, which forbids a public official from appointing a relative to a civilian position in the agency over which that official exercises jurisdiction or control.
To this end, we call on Civil Society Organisations and all well-meaning Ghanaians to join us, as we advocate the initiation and passage of an Anti-Nepotism Law for Ghana.
We contend that, notwithstanding the enormous constitutional powers conferred on the President to hire and fire, such powers must not be exercised in a whimsical manner in furtherance of the interest of family members, friends and cronies. And, we believe that the time has come for Ghana to enact an Anti-Nepotism law that imposes clear restrictions on the employment of close relatives, as it’s done in other jurisdictions.
Thank you for coming and may God continue to bless our homeland Ghana.

Signed.
SAMMY GYAMFI
National Communication Officer

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Audio: Haruna Iddrisu reveals when Mahama will announce running mate https://www.adomonline.com/audio-haruna-iddrisu-reveals-when-mahama-will-announce-running-mate/ Fri, 06 Sep 2019 17:30:05 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=1700878

Minority Leader in Parliament, Haruna Iddrisu, says a running mate for John Dramani Mahama, who is the flagbearer of the National Democratic Congress (NDC) for the 2020 polls, will be announced before the end of year.

He said the former President is still consulting with the structures of the party and will certainly announce the running mate before the year ends.

ALSO: Audio: PDS has not been cleared – Dept Info. Minister

“The president is consulting with the structures and following due process and I can say that his running mate will be announced before the end of year and then we could start,” he told host of Joy FM’s AM show.

John Dramani Mahama

ALSO: Audio: Asiedu Nketia chokes on NDC campaign message for 2020

The NDC has, meanwhile, dismissed reports that former Finance Minister, Prof. Kwesi Botchwey has been selected as running mate.

Source: Adomonline.com|Dorcas Abedu-Kennedy

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Nduom releases list of over 4,200 companies, individuals and schools owing him GH¢423million https://www.adomonline.com/nduom-releases-list-of-over-4200-companies-individuals-and-schools-owing-him-ghc423million/ Thu, 29 Aug 2019 06:56:37 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=1698001 As part of the processes initiated by the President and Chairman of Groupe Nduom (GN), Dr Papa Kwesi Nduom through the Gold Coast Fund Management (GCFM) in court to recover investment funds and pay aggrieved customers of their locked-up investments, a list of companies and individuals indebted to GCFM has been released.

The list includes construction companies and top firms in different sectors of the economy.

Senior High Schools such as O’Reilly have also been captured in the list with a debt of over GH¢ 3.5 million.

In all, over 4,200 companies, secondary schools, individuals, pastors, and other professionals are indebted to GCFM to the tune of over GH¢ 423 million.

Below is the full statement:

Appendix C: Infrastructure Projects Financed by GCFM & Other Placements – Amounts Owed

COMPANY BALANCE (AMOUNT OWED) GHS

  • A-Zak Co Ltd 1,794,659.97
    A.R.A Company Ltd 3,723,127.48
    A.S. Bashit Ent. 2,300,794.52
    A.S. Pelpuo Ltd 2,514,809.04
    Aba-Mole 3,189,413.75
    Abass & Abass 1,033,023.31
    Abdal Co. Ltd 4,481,725.92
    Abdulai Associates Ltd 5,299,838.12
    Abraham Turning Point(Presby) 1,647,426.67
    Abraham Turning Point(SDA) 1,645,309.15
    Abu Hamid Ltd. 2,399,436.62
    Adin-Puya Ent(Saboba) 2,610,704.33
    Adin-Puya Ent-Ahamadiya 2,211,455.77
    Adin-Puya Ent-Tamale 2,717,501.02
    Adin-Puya Ent.UDS 1,780,862.17
    Adu Anane (2) 138,357.32
    Adu Anane (3) 31,097.64
    Adu Anane (4) 564.14
    Affable 6,487,930.42
    Affable Cocoa Rd. Hohoe. 6,073,315.08
    African Global Pharma 1,624,848.76
    Agu Resources 22,315,057.24
    Agyakot (Effiduase) 9,413,512.45
    AGYAKOT(Jamasi Apaa Yonso) 15,126,682.02
    AGYAKOT(Mosuko-Taifa) 10,560,550.75
    AGYAKOT(Pillar 2) 7,379,040.94
    AKANSON LTD 2,416,884.66
    ALT CONST. Ltd(Asikuma) 2,184,909.56
    ALT CONST. Ltd(Brema) 1,134,514.85
    ALT CONST. Ltd(new) 804,163.20
    ANAFO CONSTRUCTION(T’DI) 105,054.68
    Ariyan 3,390,532.08
    ASA INITIATIVE(New Account) 7,509,070.05
    ASA INITIATIVE(Old Account) 8,447,733.13
    ASABEA ENGINEERING (Drabonso) 20,173,282.00
    Asabea (Emergency) 10,280,194.91
    Asabea (Takoradi) 24,881,939.45
    ASABEA ENGINEERING(AFD
    Project) 21,913,299.09
    ASABEA
    ENGINEERING(MAMPONG) 70,460,376.72
    Asabea Prestea Bogosu 21,306,116.52
    Asirop (New) 1,835,971.20
    ASSET MANAGEMENT(GCSL) 1,574,104.25
    ASTEE Co Ltd(School of deaf) 2,843,333.77
    ASUO ABENA Ltd 3,165,335.15
  • The following table presents company portfolio amounts of infrastructure projects pre-financed by GCFM.
  • AVO-Crete 811,347.83
    AYOUNI Co.Ltd 4,105,427.43
    B-MOLIE(ROAD) 15,700,174.08
    B-MOLIE(School) 6,975,640.35
    B.K.Nsiah 2,496,920.53
    B.K.Nsiah (Cocoa Road) 3,918,440.85
    Ba-Iseng Ltd. Accra 3,058,399.32
    Baccs Enterprise 1,244,221.84
    Bacon B 3,497,834.95
    Bag-Ways Ltd. Accra 3,239,919.81
    Bambert Const. Ltd.(Adjei Kojo) 1,790,037.37
    Ben Tota Co. Ltd Accra 2,181,615.40
    Benghazy Devt Co. Ltd 2,362,660.39
    Beyond Natural- Xipe 2,829,586.09
    Beyond Natural-Twifo Praso 3,191,615.96
    BLK LTD. 43,079,816.51
    Bo-Const. (Assin Building) 787,588.07
    Bo-Const. CapeCoast (Sempa Rd.) 431,354.91
    Bo-Const.(Assin Adianon) 1,148,464.13
    Bo-Const.(new) 1,550,526.46
    Boatway (Cocoa) 2,198,737.57
    BOF Co. Ltd(Classroom) 1,822,558.48
    BOF Co. Ltd(Teacher Quarters) 1,822,558.48
    Bojabi Work Ltd 1,523,272.28
    Bokan Ltd. 21,964,140.61
    Bonaaba Construction 6,030,891.48
    Both Side Company Ltd. 3,109,108.40
    Bridalu Ltd 4,016,895.28
    Britnata 6,461,848.68
    Broadreach 395,803.57
    Builder’s Consult 1,497,629.67
    Bukari Hamidu (26th July) 3,339,819.88
    Buwuah Ltd. 2,209,297.97
    Canary Contract Works(1st Pr.)1 857,574.17
    Canary Contract Works(Aowin) 10,237,548.49
    Canary ContractWorks(discount) 311,602.23
    Canary
    ContractWorks(Pomaakrom) 5,322,207.79
    Cheabu Ltd. 3,157,652.46
    ChefTech Ltd 1,056,181.73
    Core Const. (Consolidated) 171,770,219.33
    Cotopaxi 3,423,113.78
    CTM Company 2,289,768.33
    D A Electrical & Construction 3,177,720.44
    D.K Prisam Ltd_Adzentem 3,131,476.81
    D.K Prisam Ltd_Otwitire 2,304,796.72
    Dalcon Co. Ltd. 1,323,292.54
    Damoah Ent Ltd 4,516,813.41
    Danbot Ltd 66,972.35
    Danbot Ltd(Amanfrom SHS) 2,152,909.39
    Danbot O’Rielly SHS 3,590,637.80
    Danji Co. Ltd 2,545,412.16
    Dbeniako 5,608,032.94
    Deltafa Ltd(Acc 2) 1,657,260.96
    Deltafa(Bowiri) 2,044,195.03
    Deltafa(Nyagbo) 2,276,625.05
    Deltrex 6,814,276.10
    Denvella Co Ltd 2,511,467.66
    Dominion Concept(Tongor) 2,944,478.36
    Dominion Concepts(Avatime
    SHSS) 4,698,445.18
    Dominion Concepts(Sakode STHS) 2,703,669.17
    Dominion Concepts(st Francis C) 1,942,237.89
    Dongobe Const 1,118,080.31
    Dongobe Const_Dambai 1,511,394.48
    Duamkpo Ltd 2,601,867.03
    E.O Donkor Ventures 567,235.54
    EEMC 239,322.79
    EFFMAN CO. LTD. 329,673.95
    Efua Affeiduwa 236,321.83
    EL QUD 396,736.42
    Emmahall 23,981,518.62
    Equipman 735,444.86
    Esth Pee Ventures(Jinijini) 4,922,045.22
    EsthPee Ventures(Brekum) 2,872,518.34
    EsthPee Ventures(N’EdubiaseSHS 4,981,420.56
    Eufran 2,002,944.98
    Evan Empire 1,852,340.29
    Evensolomon Enthnic Homes 45,462,117.51
    Ewudzi Venture (Twifo Praso) 928,879.90
    Ewudzi Venture_Tarkwa 979,694.77
    F B Telmax 3,084,311.91
    F.A Elluem 1,505,521.18
    Fair Vision Ventures-Agogo 1,079,148.52
    Fair Vision Ventures-Akomadan 1,125,582.77
    Faith Mother Care 3,514,964.35
    Faruma 552,697.51
    Faruma(Presby) 3,506,136.42
    Fekams Co. Ltd (2) 14,028,134.21
    Florida City 2,857,625.99
    Forsmuel Ltd. Wa 1,848,807.06
    Frankad Co. Ltd 3,003,551.73
    Freedom Builders(Mpraeso) 3,862,607.11
    Freedom Fields Co. Ltd 6,770,690.67
    Friday Forever(Cashew) 2,368,940.34
    Gbagory Ltd 2,634,832.63
    GereFosco Ltd 1,351,628.06
    Ghana Leasing 1 1,128,230.87
    Ghana Leasing 2 642,600.76
    Gluck Fides 2,920,689.75
    Goruco 3,212,098.12
    Goyondodo Co. Ltd. 1,739,774.49
    GPRTU.VOLTA 13,795,394.87
    Gudmann Inter Ltd. 2,493,521.29
    Gutsy Co. Ltd Tafo 3,124,132.32
    Gutsy Co. Ltd-Drains 1,054,876.41
    Gutsy Co.Ltd 3,028,205.14
    Gutsy Co.Ltd Gyenase 3,124,132.32
    Hafiscco Ghana Ltd 2,612,166.50
    Hamzebel Co. Ltd 3,685,737.21
    HolyLand Builders 5,311,099.33
    HOSS LTD 23,186.52
    I.M Max Ent 1,436,559.45
    Icon construction(SupplyBeds) 3,915,510.21
    Icons Construction 1,970,686.11
    International Est.& Cont. Ltd 2,483,567.85
    Ishak Dapila(ATOBEASE) 3,026,804.18
    Ishak Dapila(Daboase) 276,073.58
    Ishak Dapila(Timu Tizea) 4,162,792.98
    Ishak Dapila_Saint Ambrose 4,785,421.46
    Issmu Enterprise 7,763,629.21
    Jadafco 940,887.19
    Jaik Ventures 2,115,823.07
    Jephi Ltd 1,842,241.66
    Jephi ltd Peki SHS 3,130,846.55
    Jeslord 1,745,295.39
    Jewuu Const.(Effiduase) 10,353,788.15
    Jita Credit Union 281,457.90
    Johnnabs Ent.Ltd-New 11,052.72
    Jonokie (new) 994,607.95
    Juli-Jay 5,148,302.99
    Junior Bagaya 1,799,577.46
    Juskess(Ajumako RC JSS) 1,686,882.69
    Kambol Simms Sch.Project 4,548,639.92
    Kambol_Furniture 2,797,483.46
    Katoii Co. Ltd. 194,689.09
    KENCO 3,200,516.16
    Kilu A.A Venture(Kasena nankan) 2,563,535.96
    Kindred Ghana 186,140.01
    Kings Furniture Works 55,052.70
    Kizben 3,902,431.71
    Kizo Construction Anyako2 6,162,804.05
    Kobigrand Ltd 1,519,882.22
    Komalco Ventures 4,092,720.23
    Kpodick Ent-Kojonya 1,148,276.75
    Kpodick Ent-Nuaso 989,449.78
    Kufkat Ent Ltd 584,973.93
    Kumsark Estate 13,637,771.32
    Kwagyeb 4,323,364.82
    Lar-Tan Co Ltd.-Besease 5,856,611.50
    Lar-Tan Co Ltd.-Otuam 14,739,177.30
    Limerica Gh Ltd 1,986,138.68
    Limerica Gh Ltd(Classrooms) 5,681,173.09
    Limerica(MOFA) 8,338,219.23
    Logistic Support 636,600.42
    Lor Construction 4,529,233.40
    Lucky Warabeba Ltd 2,290,629.17
    Lucky WarabebaLtd(AbekaAsokwa) 2,006,892.95
    M. Afful 6,099,665.69
    M. Isumail Gh Ltd 2,066,300.72
    M. Kwabena Ent (2) 1,659,710.80
    Mabperry Co Jasikan 601,706.62
    Mabperry Co Ltd-Agotimey 1,507,081.51
    Mabperry Co Ltd-Akroso 2,682,646.05
    Mabperry Co Ltd-Lolobi 1,336,654.54
    Mabperry( Avedome)six unit 168,789.72
    Mac-Ismael C 1,251,817.30
    Macoby Co. Ltd._Dorm.(Efutu) 11,886,010.94
    Madara Ltd. 28,366,567.65
    Magsags(KVIP) 562,599.32
    Makeen Ent Ltd. 3,133,521.50
    Mallam Issa Ishaku &Bro Ltd 5,783,827.88
    Maripoma Ent Ltd UNDP Flats 78,680,235.39
    Maripoma Ent Ltd-(Redevelop.) 42,566,567.34
    Maripoma Ent Ltd-Food &Drugs 704,221.08
    Maripoma Ent Ltd-Road 1,658,534.20
    Marydon Ltd 2,580,710.35
    Marydon Ltd-Drains 846,159.06
    Max-Aban (Akwatia) 1,184,835.50
    Max-Aban atweapease 1,409,549.10
    Max-Aban Ltd Peki Project 6,393,023.71
    Max-Aban Road 4,819,856.57
    Max-Aban(Mount Mary) 3,585,138.99
    Max-aban-Peki Technical 14,692,033.68
    Meltiba Ent Ltd 2,444,431.85
    Meltiba Ent Ltd-Suyani Prot 198,740.44
    Metro EcG Poles 2,036,946.38
    Metro Prop Holding(Abijan) 1,417,780.38
    Mill Sarfo (Tarkwa) 11,459,744.29
    Mill Sarfo Co Ltd(Akontombra) 12,688,234.62
    Mill Sarfo Ltd(CEDECOM) 487,020.22
    Mill Sarfo(Abura Dunkwa) 8,436,787.69
    Mill Sarfo(Prestea) 8,244,771.32
    Miracle Plus 2,736,844.29
    Modern times Ltd 2,030,006.24
    Nanapak (Ledzkuku) 3,125,024.37
    Nanapak (Supply 1) 460,875.88
    Nanapak Ltd Wasa 2,677,126.75
    Natoku Co Ltd 3,000,289.36
    Nejams_Building 423,885.47
    Nejams_Road 94,899.30
    New Age Star 2,011,899.65
    New Josam Const Ltd 605,373.15
    Ninieda &Ninieda Ltd 858,835.08
    Northlane (Drainage) 1,780,723.84
    Northlane (Drainage) (2) 512,680.66
    Obaakwaa Ent. 325,971.20
    ODB Construction 4,233,351.25
    Ofive Co Ltd 3,501,160.71
    Oku Fall-Furniture 3,382,529.75
    Oku Falls (Road) 3,020,228.45
    Oku Falls Ent-Kwahu Tafo 6,817,712.72
    Osekwap Ltd 576,895.82
    Osekwap Ltd(Sceptic) 5,518,848.74
    Osfams Ltd 3,092,571.94
    Panric Hostel Ltd- Bunk Beds 1,432,253.28
    Panric Hostel Ltd- Dual Desk 2,343,134.78
    Panric Hostels 7,273,792.12
    Panric Hostel_ Akontombra & Aku 6,326,813.87
    Papenmoh Ltd 1,054,563.89
    Park Side Ltd-Cocoa 3,136,107.98
    Parmac Integrated Ltd 1,532,934.65
    Patboa(Asuase) 860,753.03
    Patboa(Bomaa) 6,232,846.84
    Patboa(Sekyedumase) 2,406,686.44
    Pere Construction 1,614,200.61
    Philipduba (Ebirem) 1,503,005.88
    Philipduba Co Ltd (Bunso-Anyin) 2,389,328.91
    Pido Transport 2,287,353.91
    Pleasures Serv. Ltd. 259,172.89
    Possible Agencies-Ashongman 11,588,024.25
    Possible Agencies-Ejura 6,707,385.44
    Possible Agencies-Roads 261,331.29
    Power ( A A BAWA ) 280,683.35
    Prince Ibrahim 1,707,875.36
    R Citizen & Co 1,980,112.74
    Rasaad Co Ltd 718,650.08
    Regek Ent Ltd 11,498.28
    Reggio 41,197,167.91
    Reggio (Emergency Project) 4,663,197.61
    Reggio(maintenance) 9,853,987.58
    Ricanko 7,243,511.81
    Ricanko Co Ltd (Furniture) 2,713,251.58
    Ricanko Co Ltd Sefwi wiawso 1,074,741.40
    Rochfords Ent. Ltd 2,400,841.42
    S Benson Co Ltd 1,436,428.16
    S O Adjei 2,341,324.28
    Saabeys Ent. (2) 4,304,472.43
    Sabailo Ent. 635,448.49
    Sabruka (Drains) 200,409.93
    Sabruka Ventures( new) 191,589.81
    Sabruka Ventures3 173,318.29
    Salnama Ltd 1,678,289.02
    Sambix Ltd 219,198.75
    Sambix Ltd (Furniture) 421,093.33
    Samocoz 265,927.42
    Samster Ltd. 679,973.78
    Sandimax Co Ltd 1,225,885.85
    Sandimax-furniture 1,904,721.70
    Sapalon 9,366.96
    Sarkia Gh. Ltd 1,339,414.75
    sefabons ltd_NEW 1,000,054.42
    segonant Co Ltd 2,270,416.65
    Segonant Co Ltd(Ada) 3,729,331.43
    Segonant Co Ltd(Tema) 3,064,704.82
    Seidu Mahama Ltd 3,444,583.30
    Selsgibarn Labone Domitory 6,717,750.34
    Selsgibarns Co Ltd -Krobo 11,425,274.63
    Selsgibarns Co Ltd Keta 10,760,884.11
    Selsgibarns Co Ltd-Ashiaman 7,024,851.09
    Selsgibarns-Labone Classroom 5,104,986.93
    SFA (Culvert) 359,634.53
    SFA Ltd (Ejura) 11,088,951.83
    SFA Ltd(Drains) 737,104.00
    Shiraco Inv & Co. Ltd 1,127,990.11
    Siita Transcom Ltd 965,469.89
    Siita Transcom Ltd(Tongo A&B) 2,432,918.47
    Siltek (2) 85,554.84
    Simoski Ltd 2,003,303.74
    Siyarza Ltd 2,916,305.45
    SLID Ind. 981,970.90
    Somokwa 2 905,464.09
    Sparky Co. Ltd 2,036,793.61
    Spring Affair 2,801,944.16
    Steka Construction 4,107,370.43
    Suguru Naaba 12,688,036.14
    Suguru Naaba2 8,840,150.17
    T&A Everest 627,254.11
    Talkai Adabia Primary 1,841,169.42
    Taskyl Ent 3,967,657.60
    Tass Kalia -Zimbila Rd 9,747,936.65
    Tass Kalia New (Golokwati) 6,317,476.92
    Tass Kalia Sch 1,217,153.58
    Techno Crete-Adina Project 283,832.67
    Techno Crete-KSTS SCI REHAB 1,738,824.89
    Techno Crete-KTS Dormitory 2,740,874.00
    Tepaman Rural Bank 141,258.98
    Teymens Akim 209,770.81
    Theo-Thom Ent 406,937.95
    Tiboura Taa 3,680,241.23
    TLC Ventures 861,245.73
    Tomakan Inv 4,348,363.59
    Top City 3,206,243.39
    Trade Vision (Cocoa Road) 30,639,522.94
    Trade Vision (Emergency) 12,796,018.40
    Trade Vision Chraa Rd 33,475,925.93
    Travel King 1,685,108.34
    Trustcot 1,856,952.69
    Trustsam 1,264,457.07
    Ukiya(Quaye Nungua) 3,706,904.77
    Ushaa Ltd 1,732,724.06
    Valve Construction 4,986,782.73
    Viacah-Drains(Hohoe) 275,937.81
    West Constructions 1,948,499.17
    West Midlands 6,159,768.93
    WestFalia-Afloa Border Project 1,806,741.96
    WestFalia-Bungalow 1,869,579.81
    WestFalia-Kpelikope 1,824,453.23
    WestFalia-St Catherines 4,305,539.13
    WestFalia-Wudoaba 1,824,453.23
    Westfalia3 Sch 10,728,731.68
    Wil-Elik – Klefe 810,459.98
    Wil-Elik -Ve 3,783,950.04
    Wilmac key Ventures 2,435,840.03
    Winibisa Bros 506,073.63
    Winnermerf Ghana 672,467.66
    Yadasco Ltd New 743,270.24
    Yasnus Ventures 1,868,401.67
    Yudel 383,449.27
    Yunram 3,440,664.26
    Yusmann Ventures 1,218,085.22
    Zakka Ventures 3,338,737.99
    Zunotek EnT 1,243,910.09
    TOTAL GHS 2,215,014,757.84

Appendix D: Some GCFM Demand Notices To Defaulters

Organisation Attention Letter Date Date Received Stamp

  • Auto Parts Limited Mr Mohamad Fadl Akkad March 11, 2019 March 12, 2019
    Environ Engineering & Management Consult Mr Dyson Tei Jumpah March 11, 2019 N/A
    Ghana Cocoa Board Hon. Joseph Boahen Aidoo April 25, 2019 May 02, 2019
    Ghana Cocoa Board Hon. Joseph Boahen Aidoo August 10, 2018 N/A
    Ghana Education Trust Fund Mr Richard Boadu April 25, 2019 May 02, 2019
    Healthnet Airport Medical Center Mr Anthony Sowah April 2, 2019 April 3, 2019
    Jita Microfinance Limited N/A March 11, 2019 March 12, 2019
    Logiciel Ghana Limited N/A March 11, 2019 March 12, 2019
    Ministry of Roads and Highways Hon. Amoako Atta April 25, 2019 May 25, 2019
    Ministry of Roads and Highways Hon. Amoako Atta August 16, 2018 N/A
    GOLD COAST FUND MANAGEMENT PRESS INFO PACK APPENDIX E
  • Amounts Owed to GCFM: Placements and Commercial Papers
  • The following document lists all individuals and organisations that owe GCFM a total of GHS
    423,635,116.60
  • No. Name Total Exposure
    1 ABAPA GOLDEN LIMITED 19,369,365.91
    2 INTELLECT CONSULT & ASSOCIATE LTD 12,908,042.89
    3 THYWILLL BUSINESS & INVESTMENT CONSULTANCY 11,114,531.84
    4 ONYAMEBA ENTERPRISE 11,093,819.21
    5 JOE AZAR COMPANY LIMITED 10,976,550.75
    6 ICW COMPANY LTD 10,191,565.96
    7 KUMSARK ESTATES LIMITED. 8,102,110.51
    8 GPRTU OF TUC,VOLTA REGIONAL SE 6,825,753.44
    9 EMMAHALL LIMITED 5,566,341.85
    10 GEORGE FEILDS 5,312,813.74
    11 JOLITHANKS ENT. LTD 5,299,885.54
    12 TENDER CROWN LTD 5,283,603.09
    13 DORIJONES ENTERPRISE 5,153,207.71
    14 NUELAX PC LIMITED 4,797,555.36
    15 PRUDENT EXPORT 4,048,440.81
    16 TORNIA BELIEVE ACTION FARMS & TRAD. ENT 3,989,701.62
    17 IKE KOOMSON ENTERPRISE 3,825,943.06
    18 NINS DEVELOPERS LIMITED 3,786,753.66
    19 ABRAHAM TURNING PT ENT 3,755,509.77
    20 KENSAL MARKETING LIMITED 3,746,054.73
    21 QUALITY MEDICAL CENTRE-BAWKU LTD 3,637,366.82
    22 EKPONG COMPANY LIMITED 3,429,135.89
    23 KWESSKOFF LTD 3,358,776.52
    24 DIVINE WILL FARMS 3,287,402.62
    25 ABENAA NYARKO ENTERPRISE 3,282,936.06
    26 NAKBAK ENT 3,281,322.38
    27 QUANTUM ENGINEERING AND CONSTRUCTION LIMITED 3,211,763.37
    28 A. JUSTICE ENTERPRISE 3,190,809.58
    29 TORNIA BELIEVE ACTION FARMS & 3,124,827.27
    30 BLOOMY GOLD 2,856,769.05
    31 CHARTERED IMPEX LTD 2,840,073.81
    32 E.OWUSU TRANSPORT AND CONSTRUC 2,745,883.87
    33 F. NUURU ENTERPRISE 2,563,430.69
    34 T MADANLA LTD 2,404,092.89
    35 SIR- ERNEST FARMS & LOGISTICS 2,297,018.47
    36 DAVIES VILLA 2,287,399.21
    37 E.OWUSU TRANSPORT AND CONSTRUCTION LTD 2,246,814.80
    38 BRIDEM ENTERPRISE 2,193,081.36
    39 ADRIAN SOURCES LTD 2,179,224.04
    40 ADDAI AGYAPONG 2,071,752.41
  • 41 MEDIMAFO TEASE ENTERPRICE 1,994,887.56
    42 ABOVA WATER GHANA LIMITED 1,974,175.72
    43 MABLAY& SONS COMPANY 1,969,999.15
    44 I.B.MAIGIDA LIMITED 1,885,557.35
    45 GPRTU OF TUC,VOLTA REGIONAL SECRETARIAT 1,793,294.47
    46 ERNEST PUBLICATIONS 1,744,748.71
    47 VOLTA FOREST PRODUCTS LTD 1,731,687.07
    48 JIM TOM ENTERPRISE 1,646,375.84
    49 MANASSEY VENTURES 1,619,695.25
    50 CEDARS REAL ESTATE DEVELOPERS LIMITED 1,619,506.85
    51 DAWSON FRANCIS 1,599,499.79
    52 BAA-NTIMA GHANA LIMITED 1,592,429.67
    53 LADI NYLANDER 1,496,287.86
    54 CHECK LULU LIMITED 1,489,657.85
    55 DRIVE AND OWN GHANA LTD. 1,446,872.03
    56 SAMGLADWIN COMPANY LIMITED 1,442,553.16
    57 CHURCH OF CONQUERORS INTERNATIONAL 1,410,323.97
    58 YUSSAD LIMITED 1,373,398.99
    59 PARK FOODS GHANA LIMITED 1,350,322.25
    60 DORISMEN ENT 1,342,662.41
    61 PEBSON COMPANY LIMITED 1,307,363.10
    62 WILLIAM TUFFOUR 1,299,758.72
    63 EMMANUEL GALLO 1,297,034.24
    64 RIT-CON ENTERPRISE 1,294,686.64
    65 PREGEM GHANA LIMITED 1,289,924.65
    66 MOFERG CONST. ENT. LTD 1,257,041.13
    67 TRIPPLE CAPITAL A VENTURES 1,240,716.25
    68 D AWO BRAGO ENTERPRISE 1,185,578.02
    69 AKUOTECH COMPANY LIMITED 1,183,254.64
    70 AISIBCO LIMITED 1,124,549.60
    71 OBARIMABA ENTERPRISE 1,096,609.12
    72 ADELAIDE ADJEI TAWIAH VENTURES 1,092,908.87
    73 DE-GEONS INVESTMENT LIMITED 1,074,733.32
    74 YOUNG MAN ENTERPRISE 1,055,839.87
    75 NO HURRY IN LIFE STORE 1,018,297.50
    76 FRIMPONG GEORGE 985,967.39
    77 PROVIDENT FARMS AND TRADING ENTERPRISE LTD 977,989.85
    78 GETRADE LIMITED 972,032.76
    79 OMS STARWOOD COMPANY LTD. 967,751.61
    80 JONART HERBAL CENTER 965,298.92
    81 KYEI AGYAPONG 961,391.16
    82 ARUK ENTERPRISE 954,420.59
    83 ERIC ANTWI BOATENG 951,988.49
    84 AKUOTECH COMPANY LIMITED AKUOT 942,692.98
    85 EMBADERK VENTURES 939,275.07
    86 QUICK-BON CONSTRUCTION LIMITED 937,288.98
    87 SON OF ABRAHAM ENT 934,319.56
    88 AGBO OIL TRADING GHANA LTD 916,395.68
    89 SILTEK CONSTUCTION LTD 914,124.85
    90 PAINTSIL AND SON’S COMPANY LTD 911,961.98
    91 ELO-HIM BAKERY COMPANY LTD 904,101.47
    92 ZUMMO GHANA LTD 900,959.16
    93 BOATMON”S ENTERPRISE 887,222.86
  • 94 S.M.APPLIANCES CO. LTD 881,150.25
    95 EDINA TINA COMPANY LIMITED 868,082.63
    96 RIT-PRUMPT CO. LTD. 852,668.05
    97 ANDYFOS ENTERPRISE 848,178.28
    98 WAKPALY COMPANY LIMITED 845,144.36
    99 M.O.B CONSTRUCTION LIMITED 837,465.17
    100 MOUSACK FOOD CO LTD 827,133.47
    101 GAIKPAH JACOB 812,342.30
    102 PLANET TELECOM LTD. 806,072.07
    103 KENDIASCO ENTERPRISE 804,253.76
    104 OLIVIA NTI-KYEREMEH 793,590.03
    105 MARY COBBINA 780,602.88
    106 PREMACHE FISHING COM. LTD. 757,505.07
    107 JAMIC CONSTRUCTION WORKS LTD 717,670.28
    108 AMOS – TOM ENTERPRISE 711,351.83
    109 KAPITAL CONST&TRADING CO .LTD 708,182.60
    110 ATAA-SIMPSON CONS LTD 705,012.14
    111 JAPOF ENTERPRISE 688,326.69
    112 EXTRA QUALITY ENTERPRISE 667,611.18
    113 GBAGORAY CONSTRUCTION LIMITED 661,396.99
    114 C.K POKU COMPANY LIMITED 655,142.49
    115 TEAMWORK POWERBOATS LIMITED 654,656.28
    116 05 GHANA LTD 653,512.47
    117 BOAHENE ERIC 648,887.56
    118 ACHEAMPONG RICHARD 646,161.10
    119 FRIMPO-TEL SERVICES 643,296.34
    120 OPOKU MARK 632,377.37
    121 BETHEL KWABENYA PRAYER MIN 627,474.11
    122 WIAFE FREDRICK 626,299.90
    123 REGGIO COMPANY LIMITED 623,904.86
    124 AKMANDA ENTERPRISE 617,094.51
    125 FRIMGA TREASURES LIMITED 611,673.52
    126 LIMITED ROGERSCO 609,228.82
    127 OMASS ENTERPRISE 608,876.63
    128 MOHAMMED AWWAL 605,260.35
    129 HARRIS – BAFF COMPANY LTD 604,800.48
    130 ODO TYRES ENTERPRISE 603,715.84
    131 MOHAMMED RAHINATU 601,975.37
    132 GANOYEB SERVICE CENTRE LIMITED 599,762.41
    133 M D Amin Enterprise 579,525.84
    134 COTOPAXI ENTERPRISES LIMITED 575,825.92
    135 KWAME ANKRAH 556,945.27
    136 SAEED DAATWE VENTURES 556,056.45
    137 T 9 VENTURES 551,775.81
    138 ENSURO ADASA ENTERPRISE 544,910.86
    139 PHILITEX AMP ENTERPRISE 543,727.18
    140 PAJEVID COMPANY LIMITED 542,888.06
    141 BRINGCOM GHANA LTD 539,627.64
    142 RAHINA CAR ACCOUNT 538,251.38
    143 T. N. VENTURES 535,239.13
    144 NAVEETO LICK ENTEPRISE 528,031.89
    145 PLANTERS CAPITAL MICROFINACE LIMITED 516,050.35
    146 AMSTEK CONSTRUCTION AND TRADIN 510,010.85
  • 147 BRITE LIFE CLINIC & MATERNITY 507,805.37
    148 CHRISTIANDOT VENTURES 503,705.25
    149 GOCADO COMPANY LIMITED 499,350.50
    150 OSLIM CONST. & TRADING ENT 498,539.31
    151 KANKAB TRADING ENTERPRISE 483,240.51
    152 STAR PLUS MICROFINANCE LIMITED 478,139.57
    153 ZACKNARH COMPANY LIMITED 468,279.58
    154 CONSTRUCTION LTD ARTBOAT 466,668.67
    155 AG HOLZMANN GLAZING (GH) LIMITED 448,374.33
    156 PAUL KLEWIAH 443,150.66
    157 RISING SUN SCHOOL 439,872.35
    158 FAUSTDANSO ENTERPRICE 439,459.84
    159 MICHEAL BENZIECIE 437,449.60
    160 Q. KATHIE ENTERPRISE 435,216.19
    161 ACMECOM COMMUNICATION CENTRE 431,338.45
    162 AKWASI AKUOKO AGYAPONG 425,388.52
    163 HAFISSCO GHANA LIMITED 425,253.67
    164 DYNAMIC STAR COMPANY LIMITED 418,785.61
    165 ST LOUIS TRANSPORT & LOGISTICS 413,567.09
    166 KINGS ROYAL REGIMENT COM LTD 412,702.03
    167 MFUM AFUA 411,894.58
    168 MAXBILLY ENT 410,794.07
    169 MERKUSI ENTERPRISE 408,066.92
    170 BEN-KORL ENTERPRISE 406,105.99
    171 BEN J. MITCHUAL 398,803.71
    172 JENNY-JAKES RESTAURANT 397,241.78
    173 LEONI COMPANY LIMITED 393,061.29
    174 TETTEGAH KOMEVOR 392,784.54
    175 PERE CONSTRUCTION LIMITED 392,598.58
    176 BIWEEKLY INVESTMENT ENTERPRISE 391,219.99
    177 J.Y. UK ENTERPRISE 388,902.36
    178 ASUMA MORO 382,933.51
    179 SAMUEL MINTAH DARKOH 380,815.34
    180 DAN NEW LIFE HEALTH CENTRE 378,765.08
    181 AFAK FURN. WORKS 377,660.14
    182 YAA OSEI NYARKO 377,197.61
    183 NYINAKORAH ENTERPRISE LTD. 371,683.44
    184 UNIVERSAL COOP. COMM. CO LTD 370,296.53
    185 FLOWING STREAM COMPANY 369,125.88
    186 KWAW ETTI PETER 367,093.98
    187 K D MASAK ENTERPRISE 366,103.38
    188 ZANNTI CONSORTI LTD 363,886.74
    189 LITTLE LIGHT ENTERPRISE 361,788.87
    190 V-TELECOM 358,683.63
    191 P.A.Y BRAIN TRADING ENT 351,457.49
    192 AWUAH CHARLES 350,724.94
    193 EMMAKUANA ENTERPRISE 347,495.17
    194 OPATEC COMPANY LIMITED 345,588.73
    195 ALL GREENLAND LTD 338,333.70
    196 OPPEY ABBEY JNR 337,228.44
    197 OPMANPOK ENTERPRISE 336,930.70
    198 YEN PANIN ASA COMPANY LTD 336,452.33
    199 AWOWAH EFUA 329,379.77
  • 200 DZADAN CONSTRUCTION WORKS 328,615.57
    201 RELIANCE HEALTH CARE LTD 328,443.83
    202 ONIPA HIA MMOA MONEY LENDING LTD 323,368.37
    203 ABANPA VENTURES 321,913.84
    204 P.K.A BONNEY 306,498.47
    205 FOTOBI CO-OPERATIVE 305,868.84
    206 ISKUS COMPUTERS LIMITED 304,925.28
    207 EFFAJOUR PHARMA CO LTD 304,124.10
    208 MASTECH SERVICES 303,619.24
    209 ADANSI AKYEAH ENT 303,015.17
    210 BIWEEKLY INVESTMENT ENTERPRISE 301,862.04
    211 YEBOAH KOFI BISMARK 300,540.63
    212 ATAABADU COMPANY LTD 299,431.99
    213 RAMKAM ENTERPRISE 297,380.72
    214 ACCO TRANSPORTATION IMPORT AND EXPORT 294,032.77
    215 KINSAM -K LIMITED 288,339.30
    216 JONATHAN ABBEY 285,583.23
    217 ROYAL BLESSING INVESTMENT LTD 282,391.90
    218 ASAREDAS LTD 280,578.91
    219 KNAASIA TRADING ENT 278,241.43
    220 NANA KWASI KODUA ENT. 277,271.45
    221 FORSGAH HEIGHTS HAB 3.19 276,253.82
    222 PAUL AIDOO 273,346.99
    223 STAR HORSU ENT LTD 271,047.68
    224 DEGROUP A.GHANA LIMITED 270,524.73
    225 CIRCLE GROUP-MICROFINANCE 270,264.60
    226 G-TIDE MARKETING SERV.(ALANN F 269,917.84
    227 NYAME BEKYERE BAKERY 268,773.00
    228 P BRAINY (KIDS) ACADEMY 263,894.21
    229 OFFSHORE ENGINEERING LIMITED 263,580.68
    230 IA CORPORATE SUPPORT SERVICES LTD 260,350.41
    231 CHARTERED IMPEX LIMITED LOAN 259,999.48
    232 AL IDDISAH AND CO LTD (AL-HASS 259,715.99
    233 ARHIN COMFORT 259,133.15
    234 SAMOSWAG CONSTRUCTION WORKS 255,974.90
    235 S KORNYO ENTERPRISE 252,968.01
    236 ESHUN WILLIAM 251,923.29
    237 DIVINE 2009 PRINTING PRESS & STATIONERY 251,900.79
    238 REBECCA ASARE 249,543.62
    239 HEG ACCOMMODATION CONSULT 246,092.06
    240 FRANK DELA OFFRIDAM 245,982.90
    241 G. A YANKEY COMPANY LIMITED 239,799.01
    242 MUSTARD SEED SCHOOL COMPLEX 239,667.62
    243 SANYON FEMORE M. 238,336.13
    244 YOUNG EMELIA ENTERPRISE 237,307.49
    245 WINI ENTERPRISE 236,278.20
    246 ANIMOVID 235,603.70
    247 SAMUEL AIDOO 235,493.07
    248 BRITE LIFE CLINIC & MATERNITY HOME 233,972.96
    249 SABLAH PAUL 233,731.55
    250 HOME TOUCH GUEST HOUSE 233,644.06
    251 FRANK BAFFOUR- AWUAH 231,968.12
    252 GREAT WALL ROYAL ENTERPRISE 229,439.75
  • 253 EMSCA ENT 228,546.25
    254 RICH GYIMAH VENTURES 227,967.25
    255 NERJET GHANA 227,776.08
    256 RABAM ENGINEERING LIMITED 227,118.85
    257 DUROFIX ENTERPRISE 225,472.67
    258 MONEYLEX VENTURES 225,113.79
    259 SAMMON ENTERPRISE 224,483.59
    260 IKEMERCIES CARE VENTURES 224,055.46
    261 MOMADESCO ENTERPRISE LIMITED 222,726.78
    262 BOAJUSY VENTURES 222,332.45
    263 KWESI DAVOH 222,269.25
    264 GYAWU MARK 221,734.31
    265 KUMIWAA MEM. CONST. COM LTD. 221,298.05
    266 ED JEAMS FARMS 220,231.55
    267 GOD’S TIME ENTERPRISE 218,058.64
    268 THOMAS GYEKYE 217,673.31
    269 EMMANUEL SACKEY 217,553.75
    270 NAJI SAOUD 215,626.90
    271 EVANN EMPIRE LIMITED 213,850.91
    272 FRANCIS BOABENG ENTERPRISE 213,675.47
    273 JUSTICE BENTUM ENTERPRISE 213,480.41
    274 JOHN OTU 211,815.77
    275 EABEY OIL LIMITED 211,335.31
    276 MEGA LINK STATIONERY & MULTI MEDIA SERVI 210,507.46
    277 DONSAH RICHARD NANA 209,207.71
    278 AG HOLZMANN GLAZING (GH) LIMIT 208,736.44
    279 X MART MKTING LINKS ENT. 206,148.21
    280 ONYAME AKWAN COLD STORE 203,264.74
    281 ABIOS CONTRUCTION AND ELECTRICALS WORKS 203,233.14
    282 SENAUG RENTALS 202,033.30
    283 CLEMENT ADJEI & SONS COMPANY LIMITED 201,885.20
    284 T. TOMMY CONTRACT WORKS 199,604.80
    285 PRUDENTIAL SURVEYING SERVICES 198,818.90
    286 G 2 COMPANY LIMITED 197,370.56
    287 CHRISTIAN OBU 197,355.16
    288 MAGSAGS ENT. LTD. 196,643.26
    289 ANACOMA LIMITED 195,908.43
    290 Y. YAHAYA ENTERPRISE 195,441.15
    291 THOMAS CONTRACT WORKS 195,072.48
    292 METROPOLITAN PROPERTY HOLDINGS LTD 194,400.53
    293 SEAL-BANTINO COMPANY LTD 193,947.57
    294 EMMERC ENTERPRISE 193,372.97
    295 THEOPHILUS ODAME 193,087.79
    296 GEORGE AIDOO 190,722.52
    297 JAMES LARBIE 190,682.54
    298 MICHRIS VENTURES 190,227.09
    299 MAK CATERING SERVICES LIMITED 189,221.34
    300 WILSON- BUABENG ENTERPRISE 189,096.75
    301 ENTERPRISE OTABIL TONY B. 188,485.37
    302 AKESE WILLIAM KOBINA JOHN 188,115.69
    303 VIDA AGYEPOMAA ENTERPRISE 188,079.99
    304 PARK-SIDE LIMITED 186,148.82
    305 SALUMATS VENTURES 185,857.85
  • 306 MEGA LINK STATIONERY & MULTI 184,191.91
    307 BANSAH EMMANUEL KWESI 180,780.94
    308 ABENA SERWAA NYARKO ENTERPRISE 180,680.28
    309 ROBERT ANNAN 178,314.33
    310 S. PEPRAH ENTERPRISE 176,272.78
    311 SHAIBU GRUOP MICRO FINANCE 175,848.00
    312 STANOF LIMITED STANOF LIMITED 175,782.57
    313 SUNRIS (DINKO) LIMITED COMPANY 175,699.25
    314 AGGIE SARDINES COMPANY LIMITED 175,459.68
    315 SAMAS CONSTRUCTION WORKS LTD 172,181.94
    316 AIKJA ENTERPRISE 171,930.66
    317 CINDSARAH LIMITED 170,983.11
    318 KOBBYS EXCELLENT VENTURES 170,118.29
    319 COMFORT ENTSIE 168,460.38
    320 NOT MY MIGHT ENTERPRISE 167,082.69
    321 EPHIRATES LOGISTICS GHANA LIMI 164,949.76
    322 OPHTAY ENTERPRISE 163,177.77
    323 NANA AKWASI SEREBOUR ENT 162,681.05
    324 VINB ENTERPRISE 160,042.58
    325 ENTERPRISE AZUSAN 160,008.36
    326 ENTERPRISE P.Y ASONABA 158,780.66
    327 MICKAD ENTERPRISE 158,703.57
    328 JAMES ADJEI YEBOAH LTD 157,692.53
    329 SP CONSTRUCTIONS LTD 157,624.01
    330 NUNOO GODFRED NII OKINE 157,052.04
    331 GLADYS ADOBEA NYINAKU 157,005.68
    332 NANA JOJO SOLOMON 156,855.90
    333 J .E.A.AGGREY&SONS LTD 155,622.98
    334 REBECCA OFORI 155,291.63
    335 JACOB ESSIAW 154,817.62
    336 AKOTO AGYEIWAA VENTURES 154,755.61
    337 KINGJAME VENTURES JANET .A. ALLOTEY 154,065.81
    338 DECCOU CONSOLIDATED(DECCOU) LTD 151,794.83
    339 CHARLES AMOAH TRADING ENT 151,741.60
    340 FYNNWOOD ENT 151,048.74
    341 FRANK BAFFOUR-AWUAH 150,727.61
    342 LAWBATS ENTERPRISE 150,112.38
    343 KATEWONDERS COMPANY LIMITED 150,047.53
    344 DANSECH LIMITED samuel danso 148,806.98
    345 JAY-BEKAY ENT(GEORGE N GYEBI) 148,002.88
    346 NUMEKEVOR EMMANUEL 146,528.23
    347 WOODSTYLE COMPANY LTD 146,239.20
    348 HOZAIFEH SIMON FAIZEL 145,772.32
    349 HENRY KWESI OPPONG 145,630.84
    350 MADIT ENTERPRISE 144,291.22
    351 AMPEM PREMPEH NANA KOBI 143,115.86
    352 TANJEED ENTERPRISE 142,294.84
    353 ROYAL INTERNATIONAL SCHOOL 141,630.41
    354 A-ZAKS COMPANY LIMITED 141,605.76
    355 BRIDGE MICROFINANCE LIMITED BRIDGE MICROFINANCE L 141,403.14
  • 356 RESAMPON ENTERPRISE 141,297.69
    357 JONOKIE LIMITED 140,208.66
    358 EBOWJACKVENTURES LIMITED 138,661.42
    359 LAVIS CONSTRUCTION AND TRADE E 138,203.75
    360 JAK BEE ENTERPRISE 137,811.50
    361 NSIAH KWAME 137,329.25
    362 EB MIDLAND VENTURES 136,985.34
    363 FADECO CONSTRUCTION 135,350.14
    364 JOSEPH BOAKYE 135,081.23
    365 I. K BOAKYE ENTERPRISE LIMITED 134,672.14
    366 ANGEL MAC KAYY ENTERPRISE 134,670.16
    367 BLESSING BUSINESS CONTRACT 133,809.77
    368 NHYIRA MINERAL WATER ENT. 133,684.28
    369 MICHAEL OSEI APPAH 133,659.81
    370 BRIDGE MICROFINANCE LIMITED 133,511.57
    371 INSTITUTE OF BUSINESS PRACTITIONERS 133,359.91
    372 EPHIRATES LOGISTICS GHANA LIMITED 133,238.12
    373 BLESSED LAWANDY ENT 133,159.45
    374 RICKLAND VENTURES 133,111.80
    375 EMIMENS VENTURES 132,729.67
    376 PEDASCO ENTERPRISE 132,370.68
    377 ERIC JIAGGE 131,101.89
    378 PICOSYSTEMS GHANA LIMITED 129,571.99
    379 GREENLANDS CONCEPT 128,879.56
    380 ADU NAOMI 128,482.57
    381 JOHN YAW ASUBONTENG 127,906.28
    382 ATSERVE ESTABLISHMENT 126,924.75
    383 GILEAD SCHOOL LIMITED 126,891.10
    384 GLINT STARS ENTERPRISE 125,501.92
    385 BENALMO RESOURCES LIMITED 124,710.27
    386 AJOKO ENTERPRISE 124,665.25
    387 KOFI OWUSU 124,596.98
    388 JAYE’S COMPANY LIMITED 124,437.51
    389 EMMANUEL OWUSU FARMS & TRADING ENTERPRISE 124,062.93
    390 AB GOLDEN NUGGET COMPANY LTD 123,418.44
    391 MOSES ESSEL FRANCIS 122,920.35
    392 ICOLE CONSTRUCTION WORKS LIMIT 122,886.31
    393 TALENTED WOODWORKS 122,793.31
    394 PAUL K. FOSU 122,415.03
    395 COBBINA GEORGES 121,802.86
    396 FOBIH FRANCIS 121,756.61
    397 WALKER ENTERPRISE LIMITED 121,258.85
    398 AIDOO EMMA ESI 121,093.95
    399 MIDWAY S.P ENTERPRISE 120,920.51
    400 NARA BEKYERE AMPA ASSOCIATION 120,827.20
    401 OFKWAPS VENTURES 120,168.16
    402 PREMIER COMMODITIES 119,206.50
    403 EGYAM LETICIA 119,099.22
    404 DEVINE PAUL AGAMASU 118,841.39
    405 ITS JEHOVAH MOTORS & TRADING 118,403.95
    406 SIR- ERNEST FARMS & LOGISTICS LIMITED 118,263.62
    407 JABELENA ENTERPRISE 117,812.79
    408 MONWUS TRADING ENTERPRISE 117,225.92
    409 10-11 IMPEX TRADE CENTRE 115,486.46
    410 NINBAALU MEMORIAL VENTURES LIMITED 114,758.26
    411 ANTWI-FRIMPONG CHRISTINE 114,534.08
    412 FORRUM CONSULTING LTD 114,456.52
    413 LAVIS CONSTRUCTION AND TRADE ENT. LTD 113,792.42
    414 BIKPEST GAS SERVICES 113,425.76
    415 ATSUVI-AGBENORWOSI KWAMI 113,418.06
    416 SKY-PAC 113,183.23
    417 ASONABA POKU ENTERPRISE 112,906.73
    418 NUELAX PC LIMITED 1 112,203.50
    419 BRAND MEDIA(CORPORATE CURRENT) (11840000 110,958.82
    420 EMPAC GHANA LTD 110,446.77
    421 MALAM MUSA ENT. 110,307.31
    422 SANIKWAD ENTERPRISE LIMITED 109,560.93
    423 REGHILDDORMAR VENTURES 109,521.09
    424 ARYEE E. REBECCA 108,343.17
    425 DYNAMIC COMMUNICATION SATELLITE 107,967.12
    426 G-TIDE MARKETING SERV.(ALANN F.B. S. BRIDGES) 107,227.73
    427 DECCOU CONSOLIDATED(DECCOU) LT 107,075.10
    428 NYAME WOMU COMPANY LTD 107,055.95
    429 JEMFUL ENT 106,511.76
    430 AMUZU FRANCIS 106,284.38
    431 ROBERT NANA OSEI ANTWI 106,050.63
    432 R&R ST ANDREWS SCHOOL LIMITED 105,909.88
    433 OLOKPAA ELECTRICALS 105,659.47
    434 ANANE-DARKO ALEX 105,251.17
    435 MAGSAGS SECURITY LTD MAGSAGS 104,992.34
    436 QUANSAH EKOW FRANK 103,543.71
    437 MUGINGO ENTERPRISE 102,842.36
    438 STEPHEN AMOAKA ARCHER-STAFF 102,757.60
    439 EMMANUEL TANDOH 101,979.91
    440 OFFDO ENT 101,694.70
    441 HAMIDU ISSAH 101,590.15
    442 WILSON KUFE 101,183.19
    443 NUNOO GODFRED NII OKINE/NUNOO GLORIA-BLESSED 100,808.22
    444 ALL POWERS BELONGS TO JESUS E 100,520.67
    445 YAA KUNADU AGYEPONG 100,139.51
    446 RANDY-COFIE JEMYMA 99,077.04
    447 WINWAY JOHN CONSTRUCTION CO. L 98,561.78
    448 18TH APRIL LIMITED COMPANY 98,471.31
    449 JOE- WINNERS ENTERPRISE 98,270.16
    450 RIGHT OWNERS LIMITED 97,918.01
    451 SETH AGYEI FOSU ENTERPRISE 97,648.92
    452 FIFACOL LTD 97,316.74
    453 MODAKS CO. LTD 97,184.77
    454 JAYDARK ENTERPRISE 96,241.71
    455 BENIM PREPARATORY ACADEMY 96,013.94
    456 TTA ENTERPRISE 95,064.30
    457 PRECIOUS JESUS SCHOOL 94,167.41
    458 ENTSIL & SONS COMPANY LIMITED 94,093.82
    459 RHODALCO LIMITED 93,777.29
    460 ENTERPRISE SAMMROSALD 93,205.21
    461 BENJAMIN ANNAN BAIDOO 92,983.59
    462 ESTHER OWUSU DANSO 92,368.68
    463 TIWAA AMA 91,895.43
    464 SILEGO COMPANY LIMITED 91,784.54
    465 JULIANA YANDOH 90,275.74
    466 MENS-SAM ENT 90,193.40
    467 GODWIN GLI 89,972.64
    468 OTOO CHARLES 89,766.46
    469 BUGNALE MUMUNI 89,756.67
    470 PIUS HEALTH CARE LTD 89,637.72
    471 RONYVON VENTURES 89,403.36
    472 IT TAKES NO TIME ENTERPRISE 89,379.97
    473 ROSE ENTSIE 89,188.83
    474 RESIN TECH GH LTD 87,668.76
    475 GEBANK ENGINEERING SERVICES 87,376.50
    476 B.KAY LINKS VENTURES LTD 86,373.70
    477 NEJAMS ENTERPRISES LIMITED 86,297.83
    478 HARRY’S SIGHTS & TOUR 86,161.87
    479 BORQUAYE ABRAHAM 86,076.47
    480 ADDY NII TETTEY ANTIE SAMUEL 85,160.33
    481 ADDAI-AMOAH THERESA 85,117.07
    482 PROMPT FINANCIAL SERVICES LTD 84,976.82
    483 MENSAH BONSU MOTORS 84,725.98
    484 MAHAMA ESSEL & NAFESA E. ARTHUR 84,689.95
    485 JESLORD LTD 84,034.41
    486 BUABAI CONSTRUCTION WORKS 83,866.23
    487 CAPOS VENTURES 83,763.85
    488 EMMANUEL YANKSON 83,622.08
    489 CHARLES AMOAH 83,337.59
    490 A.A BLESSING SUPER ENTERPRISE 82,183.06
    491 GOD IS GOOD WELDING ENTERPRISE 82,156.18
    492 HAPPYOURSELF OWNED BY ANAANE AWUDU YAKUBU ENTE 81,116.49
    493 BAIDOO GIFTY THERESA 80,579.46
    494 KUM LINDA 80,471.50
    495 EQUAL RIGHT CONSTRUCTION 80,273.34
    496 OBED KORANTENG 79,895.49
    497 BOAKYE-YIADOM FREDERICK 78,576.24
    498 SIMPLE LIVING ENT 77,646.46
    499 OSEI ASIBEY SEKYERE INT.SCH. 77,436.04
    500 SABAH DALA 77,286.57
    501 EMBRACE ASSOCITION 77,197.28
    502 BAT WAYS ENTERPRISE 77,102.27
    503 CLARA BAABA QUANSAH 76,287.99
    504 NAZIR KOJO YAWSON 75,771.58
    505 SHAYAK CONSTRUCTION WORKS LTD COP 75,539.23
    506 AL-MOZAAN LIMITED 75,115.43
    507 KWABENA BUABENG 74,735.53
    508 AYIM KWAKU 74,301.68
    509 CASINO LINKS ENTERPRISE 73,799.52
    510 SAMPSAON EFFAH 73,231.72
    511 GREAT ASTRONOMERS FOOTBALL CLUB (1186000000001) 73,039.26
    512 BENSON FRIMPONG 72,598.64
    513 AGGREY KWEGYIR MICHAEL 72,501.79
    514 CHASE CLOTHINGS 72,490.31
    515 ADZAMOS VENTURES 72,102.50
    516 FRIMPONG BENSON 71,817.46
    517 AWUDI FRANK 71,798.14
    518 G-ROCK ENTERPRISE 71,620.32
    519 ARLOO RICHARD 71,585.80
    520 GOOD FRIENDS ENTERPRISE 71,582.27
    521 LYNBERT COMPANY LTD 71,506.01
    522 ADANVOR AKPENE THERESA 71,276.30
    523 APPIAH MOHAMMED 70,970.35
    524 KWAKU MARFO 70,708.17
    525 Y & K INVESTMENTS LIMITED 70,145.41
    526 AWORTWE IGNATIUS 69,414.58
    527 KINGSLEY ABOAGYE 67,722.02
    528 AB GOLDEN NUGGET COMPANY LTD 67,579.39
    529 BAABEA ELIZABETH 67,001.88
    530 FRANCIS OPOKU MENSAH 66,354.18
    531 LILLY AYITEY 65,737.26
    532 GLOBAL WAREHOUSE INVESTMENT LIMITED 65,571.35
    533 EBENEZER EGYIR 65,301.54
    534 DE-2KAY,S VENTURES. 64,831.02
    535 DERICK GYAPONG 64,789.34
    536 OBOSU K. ENTERPRISE 64,780.27
    537 ENTERPRISE BUGUBALE MUMUNI 64,769.66
    538 PREMIER COMMODITIES LIMITEDTRANSFERED 64,667.99
    539 ANKRAH OSMOND 64,226.26
    540 ACKON-ANNAN KOFI 64,154.82
    541 EMMANUEL PAPA ASAMOAH 63,681.96
    542 ROYAL PALACE HOTEL 63,675.99
    543 LEBGIYALI ENTERPRISE 63,654.57
    544 PAUL KUMI MINTAH 63,521.81
    545 ALELEWALE BUSINESS ENTERPRISE 63,165.91
    546 BUSINESS PORT ENTERPRISE 63,077.02
    547 T-ZONE ENTERPRISE 63,003.46
    548 ARTHUR SAMUEL 62,999.18
    549 JULIANA YARO 62,737.79
    550 ANSAH KWAME ASOANDZE ADU 62,656.92
    551 AMPOFO ELIJAH 62,381.10
    552 FOLLY JAMES 62,349.86
    553 OSEMAY ENTERPRISE 61,088.99
    554 OWUSU-BOAKYE KWASI 59,981.50
    555 AMAOH ABUGRI 59,921.75
    556 MANIESON THOMAS DOREEN 59,651.84
    557 ABAYATEYE SAMUEL TEYE 59,492.73
    558 QUAIDOO AMUZU ISAAC 59,471.89
    559 TRINITY GLAUBEN VENTURES 59,290.65
    560 KAMBOL COMPANY LIMITED 59,256.42
    561 MIREKU OSEI BENJAMIN 59,094.01
    562 TKODIE LIMITED 58,459.23
    563 NESTABO CONSTRUCTION LIMITED 58,213.89
    564 DARLINGTON FELIX WUGOH 58,202.95
    565 OWABEN ENTERPRISE 58,170.85
    566 SARKODIE JOSEPH 57,943.72
    567 MANFRED DOLLAH 57,942.36
    568 STEWART JULIET 57,762.41
    569 ABANUKO ENTERPRIS 57,753.99
    570 ASIEDU LOVE 57,747.33
    571 DESTINY ORIENT VENTURES LTD 57,712.39
    572 KULEK COMPANY LTD 57,690.43
    573 ODORMEY LYDIA 57,663.44
    574 OBOH IBRAHIM NUHU 57,663.44
    575 NYAMADOR ATSU 57,663.44
    576 NAZER SAMUEL 57,663.44
    577 NIMFAH CHARLES 57,663.44
    578 NKRUMAH KOFI AARON 57,663.44
    579 DANKWA PRINCE 57,663.44
    580 BAIDEN ASIEDU RICHARD 57,663.44
    581 AKYI EVANS SYLVESTER 57,663.44
    582 ADJEI VERONICA 57,663.44
    583 AIDOO HAGAR 57,663.44
    584 ADJEI AMOS NANA 57,663.44
    585 ADJETEY VINCENT KWEKU 57,663.44
    586 TWUMASI-KANKAM DORCAS 57,661.64
    587 ARMOO RICHMOND 57,546.48
    588 AMOAH CHARLES 57,322.66
    589 WINTRACK LIMITED 57,054.40
    590 HAYFORD ERIC 57,031.83
    591 AGYAM SAMUEL 56,985.12
    592 DOMKOF COMPANY LIMITED 56,872.37
    593 KONADU KWAKU JUSTICE 56,868.88
    594 KWABENA OFORI 56,294.92
    595 ISAAC KOFI BELL 56,166.84
    596 AMART’S SAUCE CATERING SERVICES 56,016.65
    597 BAIDOO SAMUEL 55,982.82
    598 YEBOAH SAMUEL 55,711.04
    599 TANKO AMINA 55,675.05
    600 OSEI BONSU PAUL 55,675.05
    601 ESSOUN KOFI 55,675.05
    602 GBATE AMA CHARLOTTE 55,675.05
    603 DADZIE PERPETUAL 55,675.05
    604 AIKINS BETTY 55,675.05
    605 ARTHUR OSEI EBENEZER 55,675.05
    606 AMOAKO BOTCHWAY DESMOND 55,675.05
    607 COBBINA ROBERT 55,387.13
    608 OPTIMUM-PRIME SERVICES 55,348.91
    609 KANKAM KENNEDY 55,277.22
    610 ACHEAMPONG STEPHEN ARTHUR 55,171.20
    611 DONKOH MICHAEL 55,135.21
    612 RICHARD OKINE ENT. 55,030.91
    613 SEYRAM COURAGE 55,019.00
  • 614 MINTAH WALTER ANTHONY 54,919.28
    615 AHASANIYA ENTERPRISE 54,865.33
    616 ARTHUR KWESI JOHN 54,610.06
    617 JOHN A HAYFORD 54,545.31
    618 ASIEDU NKANSAH RICHARD 54,405.46
    619 SAMUEL AKPOR SOWAH 54,326.72
    620 DOMPREH MERCY 53,983.56
    621 AFRIYIE RICHARD 53,983.56
    622 YUSIF ABUBAKAR 53,911.58
    623 TAWIAH EVANS 53,911.58
    624 DAWSON BAIDOO SAMUEL 53,911.58
    625 DZAKPATA JOHN 53,911.58
    626 FOSU A LINDA 53,911.58
    627 AMOAH CHRISTOPHER 53,911.58
    628 EVER SHALOM VENTURES 53,867.14
    629 FUDZI CHARITY 53,835.83
    630 ADDAI JANET 53,686.65
    631 APPIAH HELENA 53,686.65
    632 AMOAH ADJEI PETER 53,686.65
    633 AFFUL PAUL 53,686.65
    634 DR. SARFO KANTAKA 1045000001141 53,347.71
    635 AIKINS PATRICK 52,788.51
    636 GHARTEY AYAW NANA 52,737.01
    637 AWIA ABIZI DOMINIC 52,727.58
    638 DIVERSE CAPITAL LIMITED 52,690.98
    639 FRIMPONG A. BISMARK 52,579.99
    640 KWABGAB ENTERPRISE 52,493.00
    641 NASDEK SERVICES LIMITED 52,169.03
    642 APPIAH KOBINA LESLIE 52,112.13
    643 OSEI CHARLOTTE 51,698.26
    644 ASARE DEI CHARLES 51,698.26
    645 AGYEI ERNEST 51,698.26
    646 LYDIA EFUA ASIEDU (1185000000780) 51,669.47
    647 OSEI RICHARD 51,626.28
    648 AMUKWANDOH LYDIA 51,581.29
    649 A. WAHAB ENTERPRISE 51,251.38
    650 ADU-DARKO NANA YAW ADUHENE MICHAEL 51,150.36
    651 FRANCIS R. FYNN JACKSON (1182000000042) 51,057.69
    652 ANTHONY ADJEI MENSAH 50,695.85
    653 EBENEZER SAMMY FILSON 50,628.20
    654 YEBOAH FRANK 50,426.51
    655 MAXI CLASS COMPANY LIMITED 50,330.67
    656 TURKSON DE-GRAFT EVANS 50,285.69
    657 OBENG KWEKU 50,060.76
    658 OWUSU DANIEL 50,060.76
    659 ODURO KWEKU-KONTOH BENJAMIN 50,060.76
    660 DADZIE MARIAN 50,060.76
    661 DZIFA ESTHER 50,060.76
    662 HAIZEL JOSEPH 49,961.79
    663 AKESSEH GRACE 49,709.86
    664 ADAADOGU EBENEZER 49,709.86
    665 KPODO ROCKSON ALFRED KUJO 49,305.81
    666 IBRAHIM HAIZEL 49,286.99
    667 CUDJOE CHRISTINA 49,233.01
    668 AFDEM COMPANY LIMITED 49,218.58
    669 SAM ELIZABETH 48,981.08
    670 DRAMANI JOSEPH 48,909.11
    671 ADDO NII AMAAH 48,852.60
    672 CECILIA BUDU HAGAN 48,794.88
    673 PARYER OF JABEZ VENTURES 48,624.97
    674 AHELE JOSEPH 48,585.21
    675 PAUL AMPAABENG KYEREMEH 48,113.35
    676 AMOAKO PETER 47,649.49
    677 HASSAN YAHAYA 47,429.56
    678 PETER KOW QUAYSON 47,411.82
    679 LARBI SOPHIA 47,073.67
    680 ANITA HORM 46,974.08
    681 EWUSI DANIEL 46,857.73
    682 GRACE ELEANOR DADZIE (1182000000120) 46,833.04
    683 MOHAMMED HADI ALHASSAN 46,781.76
    684 EXPERT CONSULT 46,657.99
    685 BADU OPHELIA 46,641.80
    686 JOHNSON GAIPKA 46,435.76
    687 TYME LINE GROUP GHANA LIMITED 46,280.00
    688 APPIAH LINDA 46,260.93
    689 BINEY MARI SIMONG PHILOMENA 46,209.93
    690 OTOO KWESI ANTHONY 46,209.93
    691 APPIAH GYEKYE 46,209.93
    692 PINAMAN ADWOA 46,062.12
    693 M. K AWI ENTERPRISE LIMITED 45,848.35
    694 IDDRISU SEIDU 45,815.13
    695 PAINE ATTA FRANCIS 45,800.12
    696 SARFO EMMANUEL 45,729.98
    697 HAFOCO INVESTMENT LTD 45,463.98
    698 ASUMANG KENNETH NII ODOI 45,450.99
    699 ARTHUR-SIMPSON JOACHIM 45,310.20
    700 RICKS SCHOOL 45,153.79
    701 NKANSAH KUMAH 44,986.30
    702 BAIDOO YAW STEPHEN 44,986.30
    703 YUSSIF HUSSEINI YARO 44,698.39
    704 DURAYS ENGINEERING COMPANY 44,392.19
    705 HAMPTON COMPANY LTD (1184000000004) 44,327.23
    706 MICHAEL NKANSAH 44,186.62
    707 CHARTERED IMPEX 43,943.09
    708 YEBOAH KOBINA 43,906.63
    709 APASIBA MEMORIAL SCHOOL COMPLEX LIMITED 43,859.48
    710 JAMES ESHUN COBBINAH 43,855.78
    711 JUSTLINE ENTERPRISE 43,832.28
    712 OVERSEAS UNION LTD 43,831.56
    713 AMOA-MENSAH EDWIN JOSEPH 43,744.68
    714 ESSIECO ENTERPRISES LIMITED 43,698.29
    715 TILIBE MORDECAI TAKAL 43,590.14
    716 BIGWILLS ENTERPRISE LTD 43,470.59
    717 ARABAS OVEN ENTERPRISE 43,464.14
    718 EMMES J. ENTERPRISE 43,325.48
    719 MUSHEI ABUBAKARI 43,306.80
    720 OPOKU LUCY 43,078.88
    721 ISAAC YANKEY ENTERPRISE 43,000.93
    722 AGYEMANG OSEI ROSEMARY 42,999.56
    723 KINEDDY CO. LTD 42,986.97
    724 ABU RAHMAN ENTERPRISE 42,970.63
    725 MOHAMMED M. ABUBAKAR 42,884.00
    726 ALT CONSTRUCTION LIMITED 42,703.88
    727 ADONGO AKOLOGO ENT 42,464.19
    728 EMMANUEL TACHIE HEYFORD 42,395.09
    729 KAMOAT LIMITED 42,327.32
    730 MOSES KWAKU TEYE ENTERPRISE 42,319.69
    731 JUDICIA E BOTCHWAY (118500000 42,287.12
    732 GRA-B-ENTERPRISE 42,235.77
    733 BOKAN LIMITED 42,145.87
    734 THOMAS JONAH JNR 42,107.18
    735 VICOBICK ENTERPRISE 41,910.57
    736 AKOGO VIVIAN 41,756.28
    737 HON. SIMON LAAR 41,747.29
    738 OBENG STEPHEN 41,675.31
    739 APASIBA MEMORIAL SCHOOL COMPLE 41,531.35
    740 VICTORIA BOAKYE 41,529.84
    741 DANIELS ABENA AHWIRENBEA ESTHER 41,497.88
    742 FRIMGEO VENTURES 41,405.39
    743 ARKRAFPHT WORKS 41,127.12
    744 DONKOR KOFI BERNARD 41,098.05
    745 LOGGIE KANMAALE SOMPSON 40,997.38
    746 BINEY KOFI ALBERT 40,883.55
    747 WIABOH ISHMAEL 40,811.57
    748 STEPHEN NII ARMAH HAMMOND 40,787.60
    749 ADU-DARKO NANA MICHAEL 40,680.54
    750 BIMPONG JAMES 40,644.22
    751 DOMSTON ENTERPRISE 40,498.47
    752 SALAMATA KETIME 40,271.74
    753 ACHEAMPONG JOYCE 40,271.74
    754 DARKOH BISMARK 40,127.78
    755 WAHABU AZUURE AYINEBIRE ENTEERPRISE 40,039.61
    756 MARY OPUNI 40,021.22
    757 ANNAN ROBERT ODARTEY 39,967.56
    758 FRIMPONG ERIC KOFI 39,875.53
    759 KARIM AYI (SA) 39,820.18
    760 COFFIE COMFORT 39,767.89
    761 ANDERSON REGINA 39,767.89
    762 AKYERE KOFI LINCENCED CHEMICAL SHOP 39,668.42
    763 BOKKSON ENTERPRISE 39,665.14
    764 HAYISON KYEREWA HILDER 39,587.95
    765 HAMZTECH GHANA LIMITED 39,564.08
    766 RHEMA MOTORS 39,481.99
    767 KWAKYE ENOCH 39,454.53
    768 INTIN RANDY 39,422.04
    769 HAWA HAMIDU 39,035.66
    770 JAPAN BASE ENTEPRISE 38,934.49
    771 KISSI OSEI HENOCK 38,876.01
    772 M-VISIONS 38,845.06
    773 ORLEANS-LINDSAY CONDUA JAMES 38,747.31
    774 DIJULS GHANA LIMITED 38,730.47
    775 HAYFRON JOSEPH JNR 38,716.58
    776 E A S MOTORS CORP 38,611.27
    777 FAMILY CARE COMPANY LTD. 38,570.93
    778 AMPOMSEM EWURAMA 38,508.27
    779 AMPOFO LARBI ERIC 38,508.27
    780 OFOSU ISAAC KELLY 38,413.51
    781 CORPORATE ARENA CO. LTD 38,249.04
    782 TWUMASI DIANE 38,215.58
    783 SAMNURUS ENTERPRISE 38,206.61
    784 ADDAE ADJATEY JONATHAN 38,148.38
    785 ANTHONY SAM (1182000000140) 38,145.14
    786 EVANN EMPIRE LIMITED 38,066.22
    787 OPOKU FRANK 38,014.90
    788 APAMAX VENTURES 37,885.23
    789 SOSU SUZAN 37,855.47
    790 KWEKU EHUN & E.E. EHUN 37,799.58
    791 WILLIAM EFFA ATTA 37,788.49
    792 AUGUSTINA ADJEI 37,788.49
    793 CARE SPECIALIST MEDICAL LAB LTD 37,788.49
    794 ABDUL GAGGAR IBRAHIM 37,701.08
    795 IDDRISU SAFIANU C/A 37,669.66
    796 AGYEMAN OPOKU FRANK 37,311.67
    797 COUNTER CHQ NORTH BRANCH 37,274.35
    798 MILLERITE DESIGN SERVICES 37,230.95
    799 DFAJ NOPAMAD ENTERPRISE 37,056.01
    800 ACK-MAX CONSTRUCTION LIMITED 36,910.25
    801 GERSHON O. DJAN 36,812.15
    802 KWIQPLUS VENTURES 36,809.77
    803 AMPOFO MICHAEL JOE 36,768.82
    804 JOYCE APENTENG 36,597.65
    805 SHAGSHAUN VENTURES 36,426.42
    806 AGYEMAN-MANU KWAKU 36,412.06
    807 MAVENT VENTURES 36,389.10
    808 RYCHNAD INVESTMENTS 36,345.08
    809 BAMUEL VENTURES 36,239.85
    810 OWUSU FRIMPONG ENOCH 35,989.04
    811 AYERAKWAH JOSEPH 35,989.04
    812 GYAMAY TIMBERS LTD 35,778.51
    813 BERNICE ATITSE 35,692.53
    814 CUDJOE ANTHONY 35,273.51
    815 NINBAALU MEMORIAL VENTURES LIM 34,917.11
    816 DUKO ODURO PERTERSON 34,479.66
    817 ERNESTINA N. DENNIS (1182000000087) 34,383.28
    818 ABBAN CHRISTIAN 34,308.86
    819 CHUKWULOBE KINGSLEY 34,043.11
    820 ODOOM PATRICK 33,949.65
    821 ARTHUR REBECCA 33,649.75
    822 PHILIP QUARCOO 33,540.31
    823 AWUKU LAWRENCE 33,529.77
    824 ESTHER APPIAH KUBI 33,501.41
    825 CHRIST CARE PREPARATORY SCHOOL 33,459.30
    826 ENTERPRISE E. KUSI 33,400.46
    827 CALVIN JOSEPH DARLIN (1182000000351) 33,339.31
    828 CYNTHIA DANSOA BOATENG 33,289.86
    829 MOHAMMED DUADA 33,121.25
    830 MICRO CAPITAL NETWORK LTD 33,082.17
    831 ADB SCIENTIFIC PRODUCTS ENTERPRISE 33,065.33
    832 ABRAHAM LINCOLN COMPANY LIMITED 32,947.86
    833 ALFRED KWAKYE 32,810.24
    834 MAWUENA VIVIAN 32,717.10
    835 DONKOR VICTOR 32,714.04
    836 FOSUAA AGNES 32,714.04
    837 ACKOM MARY 32,714.04
    838 AIDOO ERIC 32,714.04
    839 PROGRESSIVE PEOPLE’S PARTY 32,694.60
    840 KWADWO ANTWI TABI 32,676.36
    841 ASUMAN KWAW HAROLD 32,610.21
    842 OHENEBA KORANTENG 32,390.14
    843 SUMAILA ISSAKA 32,390.14
    844 NYANEBA ESI FRANCISCA 32,390.14
    845 ESSILIFIE ABA LINDA 32,390.14
    846 RICHARD A BUCHAG 32,353.97
    847 TAMAKLOE PATRICK 32,166.21
    848 HOUSE OF HOTTA LIMITED 32,088.19
    849 CHRISTIAN ANDOH DONKOR 32,033.88
    850 MCFFOSS DISTRIBUTION SERVICES LTD 32,025.17
    851 PATRICK AGGEY 32,013.98
    852 KODUAH OWUSU 31,990.23
    853 YEWULI EMMANUEL 31,910.15
    854 IBRAHIM IDDRISU (1182000000073) 31,826.12
    855 LYNDERIC ENTERPRISE 31,670.36
    856 BONUAH PAUL 31,598.38
    857 PETER AGYEI 31,573.01
    858 EBONY ENTERPRISE 31,494.30
    859 AGYAPONG FRANKLIN 31,404.29
    860 FREMPONG ADUWAA PRISCILLA 31,364.45
    861 JOSEPH AMISSAH 31,362.43
    862 KAYABA MAHAMI 31,310.47
    863 BAFFOUR AGYEI BERNARD 31,303.27
    864 MOHAMMED IDDRISU 31,285.27
    865 DELDEE VENTURES 31,145.17
    866 SARPONG GETRUDE 31,004.56
    867 MOHAMMED APPIAH 30,894.11
    868 KONADU KOFI 30,770.63
    869 GRACE AIDOO GYAMFI 30,536.92
    870 CONNECT GLOBAL 30,436.29
    871 ATTAKORAH-AMANIAMPONG YAW 30,375.04
    872 ACHIAA AMA 30,362.69
    873 FRIMPONG KWADWO 30,336.46
    874 JUNCTION 8 GUEST HOUSE 30,311.37
    875 OSEI GEORGE 30,230.79
    876 ABBAN KOFI EMMANUEL 30,230.79
    877 HOLYLAND BUILDERS COMPANY LIMITED 30,134.52
    878 DANSO KWASI 30,086.84
    879 ABDULAI OSMAN 29,946.19
    880 PENNAH STEPHEN 29,912.80
    881 KRONZU DORIS 29,800.80
    882 OPOKU ELIZABETH 29,654.97
  • 883 AMELI KUMAH ELIEZER 29,645.11
    884 MUZISCO COMPANY LIMITED 29,635.86
    885 2424 COMPANY LIMITED 29,526.02
    886 SULEMANA ALHASSAN 29,487.76
    887 E-MESS CONSTRUCTION & TRADING 29,351.19
    888 AZUMAH OLIVIA 29,328.48
    889 EMMANUEL OWUSU 29,324.30
    890 AGYEMANG PRINCE 29,284.28
    891 MAURUS SERVICES LIMITED 29,080.40
    892 AINOO ALICE 29,079.15
    893 COOMPSON EMELIA 28,994.86
    894 ELIZABETH AZUMAH 28,933.07
    895 DIANA AKOSUA MENU 28,924.39
    896 SEIDU SALIFU 28,904.06
    897 GEORGE KWAKU GYABAA 28,803.69
    898 SIMON AUBIN 28,791.23
    899 ADDAI JOSEPH 28,791.23
    900 CONSTANT KWAKU SAMUEL 28,789.72
    901 MODERN TIMES LIMITED 28,699.03
    902 SAKO CERAMICS AND TILES 28,587.03
    903 JOHNNY ACHIBRAH 1041000000869 28,572.78
    904 ABIODUN ADEKUNLE 28,472.80
    905 ASANTE AKUA JANE 28,460.21
    906 ZAGOON ABDUL MANAF 28,368.47
    907 UMORO SADAT SAANA 28,356.05
    908 SAM KWAKU JOHN 28,341.37
    909 MENSAH DELADEM KINGSLEY 28,341.37
    910 FAMIYEH JOE EUSEBEUS 28,288.07
    911 KOBOTA ENTERPRISE 28,215.95
    912 AMPAH- TURKSON CHRISTIANA 28,212.53
    913 ABIGAIL BUERTEY 28,206.37
    914 LAKO JEAN-JACQUES SEBASTIEN 28,143.43
    915 OWUSU THOMAS K 28,125.44
    916 OTOO HANNAH 28,109.24
    917 TENGFRIM VENTURES LIMITED 28,060.87
    918 QUARTEYSON ELIZABETH 28,030.14
    919 BOATENG ALEX KWAKU 28,022.90
    920 ADIKU ELORM IVAN 28,009.73
    921 BROWN ALEX 28,003.07
    922 ANABA GEORGE 27,991.56
    923 SOSU FRANK 27,979.46
    924 DANIEL EWUSIE 27,916.88
    925 MADARA LIMITED 27,885.89
    926 MUSAH AYISHETU 27,861.74
    927 ENTSIE ROSE 27,827.63
    928 ALEX TWENEBOAH KODUAH 27,743.95
    929 CONSTANCE AMANKRAH-YEBOAH 27,710.45
    930 OFORI ACHEAMPOMAA 27,682.63
    931 ANSAH VIVIAN 27,682.19
    932 E2 KOSAAS 27,631.02
    933 NSOWAA ADWOA 27,621.59
    934 MICHEAL KWAKU ADADE 27,580.06
    935 MUJEED A ADAMS 27,499.66
    936 CHARLOTTE MARTIN HAGAN 27,459.64
    937 GEOJULI ENTERPRISE 27,441.64
    938 TETTEY DZIWORNU 27,426.20
    939 EUNICE ADELAITAR 27,371.21
    940 KUMI FRANCIS 27,366.93
    941 STELLA OWUSU-ASAKU 27,332.13
    942 ADJEI AKROMAH PAUL 27,279.98
    943 GEORGINA YATES 27,279.73
    944 JUSTICE BOAMA KWABI 27,270.73
    945 NIMPONG GEORGE 27,263.28
    946 MARK OSEI TUTU (1182000000030) 27,257.88
    947 BOAHEN J.K 27,232.84
    948 HWE SE AWURADE AKASA ENT. 27,232.55
    949 ERIC SEEDOF ASIEDU SIMPEY 27,171.73
    950 KUJAR BENN 26,991.78
    951 DADZIE KWAME MIKI PAUL 26,991.78
    952 HAERU AMABDI 26,991.78
    953 AMOJOS ENTERPRISE 26,991.78
    954 KUSI SPRAYING ENT 26,981.45
    955 BEST ASSOCIATION 26,948.70
    956 GAIKPAH AGNES 26,934.74
    957 SEIDU ADAM 26,791.25
    958 CHARLES COFFIE 26,755.69
    959 GUR-GBAYA CONSTRUCTION SERVICES 26,703.90
    960 BOAMAH KWAME 26,676.52
    961 ASARE FESTUS YEBOAH 26,663.99
    962 YEBOAH DANIEL 26,573.05
    963 GOSHEN HANDS ENTERPRISE 26,566.57
    964 PAAPA PEARCE PERASON 26,566.39
    965 NUWORMEGBE GABRIEL 26,551.99
    966 FELICIA BROWN (1182000000057) 26,498.59
    967 JOYCE THOMPSON 26,436.97
    968 BENJAMIN MENSAH 26,415.74
    969 T.BOAMAH WILD COMPANY LIMITED 26,338.47
    970 MARTHA NYARKO 26,313.39
    971 GREAT AMBITION VENTURES 26,304.25
    972 ASAANA MARY 26,272.00
    973 MENSAH JOSEPH GRAHAM 26,103.82
    974 DONKOR FREDERICK TABI 26,077.66
    975 RAMANI SALIFU 25,912.11
    976 ANSAH KOFI B 25,912.11
    977 ESSEL NANA OHENEMAA ASANUAH 25,894.40
    978 IBRAHIM SHARRIF KOFI 25,732.13
    979 SADIQ RAHINATU 25,707.55
    980 DYNAMIC SATELLITE COMMUNICATION 25,609.01
    981 FAUNKET ENTERPRISE 25,595.05
    982 HAYFORD AMOAKO 25,572.73
    983 SHAIBU SURAJU 25,566.15
    984 YEBOAH GEORGINA 25,534.22
    985 BENEFOH DENNIS 25,510.69
    986 GORDON MAVIS 25,444.25
    987 ADLER TECHNOLGY SYSTEMS 25,416.72
    988 ADWOA AGYAPOMAA 25,396.64
    989 NYATEPE EDWARD 25,387.86
    990 NASSAR MAKAFUI MANSA 25,358.27
    991 DONKOH RICHARD 25,280.68
    992 LAADI MUHAZU 25,192.33
    993 KWAME OSEI BONSU FELIX 25,192.33
    994 LARTEY DIVINE 25,192.33
    995 AMPOFO PETER 25,192.33
    996 ASARE KWAME ISAAC 25,168.25
    997 SACKEY MAXWELL 25,039.41
    998 WESTLINK EXPRESS MICRO FINANCE LTD. 24,868.39
    999 LARYEA DERICK 24,778.45
    1000 ALEXANDER ACHEAMPONG 24,766.58
    1001 DECCON LTD 24,698.34
    1002 WILLIAMS MAMIE ADUTWUMWAA 24,660.77
    1003 ABDULAI HALIDU 24,652.49
    1004 MENSAH NANA GEORGE 24,615.10
    1005 HENRY KOW ABRAHAM (1185000000237) 24,508.54
    1006 OWUSU KENNY 1045000001781 24,292.60
    1007 LYDIA FULAH 24,169.16
    1008 AYEBO WILLIAM 24,085.31
    1009 KABUTEY JOSHUA 24,059.03
    1010 BEDMARKS ENTERPRISE 24,053.82
    1011 JOSEPH ANTOBAM 24,045.90
    1012 GIBBO EXP. AND IMP. VENT. 23,992.67
    1013 SAMUEL NANNOR 23,947.86
    1014 LEMECHI AMAEFULE VICTOR 23,851.95
    1015 CONSTANCE AMANKWAH YEBOAH 23,842.16
    1016 SEWORNU ENOCH TEYE 23,792.75
    1017 ELO-HIM FLOUR 23,777.42
    1018 DUSI FRANCIS JOSHUA 23,755.57
    1019 ENNINFUL PAULINA 23,752.77
    1020 YIRENKYI GEORGE 23,736.54
    1021 SAM FRANCIS 23,707.60
    1022 AKWESI ANDERSON 23,703.86
    1023 SETH ASAMOAH ADDO 23,666.39
    1024 NEW JOSAM CONSTUCTION LTD 23,645.12
    1025 BENTIL ALEX KIZITO 23,644.80
    1026 FRIMPONG FOSU 23,590.24
    1027 KONADU MERCY 23,535.93
    1028 ADARKWAH OFORI EMMANUEL 23,521.25
    1029 SAMUEL ACQUAYE 23,518.84
    1030 DEPENDABLE SOLUTIONS ENTERPRIS 23,378.95
    1031 OPOKU ANTWI 23,296.79
    1032 AFEKE LILY 23,266.92
    1033 RICHARD ADDO 23,266.34
    1034 OTOO ENOCH 23,226.21
    1035 SANDIMMS MARTABA LIMITED 23,186.95
    1036 ADDO EMMANUEL ADOTEY 23,093.02
    1037 TIMOTHY DOTSE 23,056.42
    1038 ANYINAKWA JOSEPH 23,032.99
    1039 KWASI PETER / EMMANUEL AMOABA 23,021.04
    1040 BENTUM VENTURES 22,932.47
    1041 NKETIAH THEOPHELIA 22,926.89
    1042 KOJO ANTWI BOSIAKO 22,906.05
    1043 GEOSDAN TRADING ENT. 22,895.98
    1044 EDWIN SELORM DZEBU- TSOR 22,862.43
    1045 ARTHUR JUSTICE JOHN 22,721.07
    1046 BINEY FRANCIS 22,709.08
    1047 ACHIAMAA AGARTHA 22,639.63
    1048 FOLLY STEPHEN 22,529.14
    1049 KENNEDY ADU-GYAMFI 22,511.15
    1050 UMAR HAFIZ 22,478.76
    1051 CHRISTOPHER DARKEY 22,436.90
    1052 OBENG – ASAMOAH DAVID 22,421.17
    1053 OXFORD PREP. SCH.- KISSI 22,420.24
    1054 MUSTAPHA AWOEGYAN 22,405.12
    1055 GAFA EDWARD 22,391.88
    1056 ADORBOE JOSEPH 22,314.21
    1057 KAKRABA KWAME 22,212.44
    1058 PAUL KWABENA NYADZRO 22,155.72
    1059 ROBERT CHARLES VANDYCK 22,132.22
    1060 NKONSAH SAMUEL 22,128.01
    1061 APPIAH ERIC 22,121.92
    1062 PEPRAH KWABENA 22,076.83
    1063 AWUDU AYAMBILLA ENTERPRISE 22,054.98
    1064 TANIMU BABA 22,043.65
    1065 FRIMPO-TEL SERVICES LTD 22,043.14
    1066 7M GHANA LTD (1184000000001) 22,023.53
    1067 BAAH PATRICIA 22,003.34
    1068 NTERFUL JOHN 21,991.97
    1069 AKUTTER KWEKU 21,973.18
    1070 ZANZIBA ADENYO 21,971.02
    1071 HAPPY KEGBORLU 21,971.02
    1072 DANKWA ABIGAIL 21,953.32
    1073 DEPPY TRADERS 21,906.53
    1074 FATADEI PATIENCE 21,809.36
    1075 LOUIS DARKO 21,789.17
    1076 SAMEVI BENJAMIN 21,762.03
    1077 THERESA AKPENE ADANVOR 21,719.75
    1078 KOOMSON KOJO JOHN 21,675.77
    1079 KISSIEDU LUDWIG ALFRED 21,651.80
    1080 SAPPOR VERONICA 21,618.55
    1081 JOSHUA RENE ASSIBA 21,614.12
    1082 FUSEINI SALIFU 21,602.96
    1083 QUAYSON GRACE 21,593.42
    1084 QUARCOO PHILIP 21,593.42
    1085 TAWIAH ABOAGYE HAGAR 21,593.42
    1086 LAILA SULEMANA 21,593.42
    1087 MENSAH CLEMENTINA DORIS 21,593.42
    1088 ARHIN ABIGAIL 21,593.42
    1089 AKOLOGO COMFORT 21,593.42
    1090 ACKAH DAVID 21,593.42
    1091 KARIKARI KELVIN 21,553.40
    1092 SAFIAN YAKUBU 21,525.23
  • 1093 ADEGAH EMMANUEL 21,491.25
    1094 SAMUEL SOVON 21,388.50
    1095 FRANCIS AGOZI 21,388.50
    1096 CEPHAS AGBOVOR 21,388.50
    1097 HEAVEN ROCKMERCHANT 21,350.53
    1098 AGYAPONG KWABENA BAAH 21,348.30
    1099 BONUAH JOHN 21,345.82
    1100 DUKER NYAME KWESI 21,255.27
    1101 BORTEI SOPHIA 21,251.53
    1102 DECCOU CONSOLIDATED(DECCOU) LTD 2 21,227.49
    1103 GUIDEMECO VENTURES 21,205.25
    1104 BENJILAMP ENT 21,173.18
    1105 ACQUAAH & SONS LIMITED 21,170.81
    1106 ABUDU ALI 21,168.18
    1107 DONTWI ELIZABETH B 21,155.11
    1108 NEIZER BESSIE AMA 21,143.56
    1109 ODO YEDE SUPERMARKET 21,130.82
    1110 JOHN QUARM 21,129.17
    1111 ANDERSON PHILOMENA 21,089.58
    1112 MAC N DELL CO LTD 20,998.63
    1113 EKOS NEW VISION VENTURES 20,976.28
    1114 DOMAYE ENTERPRISE 20,968.26
    1115 ODOI BISMARK 20,944.22
    1116 JOSEPH FRIMPONG FORMALLY OF MAK YOUNG 20,918.88
    1117 AFRIYIE WADIE AMA 20,913.52
    1118 ESTELLE ENRERPRISE 20,899.63
    1119 AIDOO MOHAMMED KWABENA 20,891.64
    1120 MICKSON-YEBOAH THELMA 20,882.46
    1121 OWUSU ANSAH SAMUEL 20,856.55
    1122 BOATENG KOBINA PAUL 20,830.64
    1123 AIDOO STEPHEN 20,746.17
    1124 ELIAS ABORGEH 20,668.72
    1125 AMANKWAA CHARLOTTE 20,637.74
    1126 TWUM EMELIA 20,633.70
    1127 JAMES ARTHUR 20,594.30
    1128 AZIATOR JANET 20,592.97
    1129 AKUA AFRIYIE – OPOKU 20,570.22
    1130 ASIEDU SAAMEA BEATRICE 20,562.59
    1131 DONKOR EMMANUEL 20,545.24
    1132 ABDULAI ABDUL-KARIM 20,446.71
    1133 ANDOH NEWTON 20,436.66
    1134 ERNEST YAWSON 20,405.79
    1135 YAKUBU MUHAMMAD ABUBAKARI 20,393.77
    1136 ANTHONY SONIA EUGENIA 20,393.77
    1137 AGBLEHOR KWADZO WENCENSLAUS 20,379.05
    1138 DONKOH JAMES 20,378.87
    1139 BATURE SALIM ABDUL 20,369.80
    1140 ESHUN JOYCE ANASTASIA 20,364.04
    1141 KERSON EBENEZER A 20,334.53
    1142 ADJEI K. FREDERICK 20,264.57
    1143 MORO SALAM 20,264.31
    1144 ASARE ALBERTA 20,251.39
    1145 TETTEH QUAYE ISSAC 20,243.58
    1146 ODOOM JONATHAN 20,209.79
    1147 KWESI BOTCHWAY 20,201.01
    1148 HAIL VENTURES 20,198.78
    1149 DAVID OHENE YEBOAH 20,153.86
    1150 RICHKWABEN ENTERPRISE 20,152.93
    1151 APPIASAH KWAKU YEBOAH 20,118.16
    1152 MENSAH CHARLES 20,093.98
    1153 DAUDA ABDULAI AGURI ENTERPRISE 20,074.58
    1154 JOHNBENG ENTERPRISE 20,052.34
    1155 ORLEANS-YEBOAH HELENA 20,018.87
    1156 DARKWA ERIC ANTWI 19,991.91
    1157 MOHAMMED AMIDU ENTERPRISE 19,957.83
    1158 ATTAKORAH COLLINS 19,907.41
    1159 MORNYOR PATRICIA 19,907.19
    1160 GYASI PATRICIA 19,890.06
    1161 ANTWI-BOATENG FRANCIS 19,879.45
    1162 KOFI NYARKO 19,869.44
    1163 TETTEH LYDIA 19,829.89
    1164 NEEQUAYE OFORI JAMES 19,815.57
    1165 ANIAKU KWAKU FRANCIS 19,793.97
    1166 ARTHUR CEPHAS 19,793.97
    1167 ADDO DANIEL 19,785.37
    1168 BENYI KOFI 19,757.98
    1169 AMOAH THERESA 19,721.99
    1170 BENEDICT DUKU 19,650.02
    1171 IDDRISU ADAM LOAN A/C 19,588.84
    1172 GAAP4 DE – VENTURES 19,558.39
    1173 ERIC BOAKYE DJAN (1182000000019) 19,516.10
    1174 OFORI DORIS 19,484.07
    1175 ADDAI REBECCA 19,475.07
    1176 Y. MENSAH JAMES 19,471.22
    1177 ANTWI JUSTICE 19,443.30
    1178 MAHAMI GRUMAH GIDEON 19,434.08
    1179 ARTHUR RICHARD 19,433.65
    1180 LORDYSMUN VENTURES 19,317.48
    1181 PAUL GYABAAH 19,279.33
    1182 BINFOH CHARLES 19,242.30
    1183 PETER KWARTENG 19,235.46
    1184 SALIFU MAHAMA 19,206.38
    1185 ROCKSON MICHEAL OFORI 19,137.75
    1186 SARPONG TIWAA MAVIS 19,110.18
    1187 GIBBO EXPORT AND IMPORT VENTURES 19,092.04
    1188 NELSON REGINA 19,074.19
    1189 HAMMARA HASHIMIN 19,069.73
    1190 LARTEY RACHEL 19,011.32
    1191 ASUMADU GEORGINA 19,004.59
    1192 ESTHER HOUPHOUET 18,937.43
    1193 SULEMANA IDDRISU 18,914.26
    1194 OTOO K FRANCIS 18,905.04
    1195 BAMFO YAW EMMANUEL 18,901.44
    1196 SARFO KWESI 18,894.25
    1197 YEBOAH EVANS 18,873.09
    1198 CLARKE PAULINA 18,872.04
    1199 ABBAN EVANS ERIC 18,864.52
    1200 OFORI GODSON 18,821.55
    1201 DOMINION VENTURES 18,749.35
    1202 AWAL IDDRISU MOHAMMED 18,743.88
    1203 LAWRENCE ETTEH 18,729.38
    1204 AGBEE ETEY 18,729.38
    1205 ABRAHAN ABORGEH 18,729.38
    1206 NEEQUAYE MARGERET 18,714.30
    1207 OPOKU MICHEL HENRY 18,691.23
    1208 SAKPETOR MAXWELL ISRAEL 18,595.14
    1209 TUMATAH CHARLES 18,500.71
    1210 DAY BY DAY ELECTRONICS ENTERPR 18,487.79
    1211 ADANFOPA BOAFO INVESTMENT GH.L 18,457.95
    1212 BRUCE -VANDERPUIJE WILLIAM EBENEZER 18,431.90
    1213 RAYMOND ABAIFAAH 18,401.92
    1214 H.M DESTINY ENTERPRISE 18,353.80
    1215 GYAPONG MARGARET 18,334.69
    1216 AHMED SADICK ABUBAKARI 18,294.42
    1217 OWUSU GORDON 18,282.43
    1218 ARHIN KOFI ISAAC 18,282.43
    1219 OSEI OWUSU 18,278.98
    1220 VICTORIA OFORI 18,210.45
    1221 KURANKYE S.E JOHN 18,202.32
    1222 SAM-BENTSI ERIC 18,174.47
    1223 SERWAA LYDIA 18,174.47
    1224 QUAIDOO AMUNSU ISAAC 18,174.47
    1225 BENTSI-SAM VERA 18,174.47
    1226 PEPRAH COLLINS 18,164.46
    1227 BOUHAIRIE HUSNI F. 18,138.15
    1228 OWIREDU REBECCA 18,138.12
    1229 REBECCA AFAZDIE 18,131.39
    1230 ASHLEY RICHARD NII ARYEE 18,083.23
    1231 GAIKPA MARTIN 18,059.52
    1232 THOMAS PHARMACEUTICALS CO. LTD. 18,032.31
    1233 DANIEL WIAFE 18,003.19
    1234 OFUOKWU NDUBUISI ROBINSON[CA] 18,002.76
    1235 YEBOAH EMMANUEL KWAAH 17,994.52
    1236 VERA KAFUI ADDO 17,994.52
    1237 TAHIRU MOHAMMED 17,994.52
    1238 OWUSU FRANK 17,994.52
    1239 KWARTENG K GRACE 17,994.52
    1240 MUSAH SHAIBU 17,994.52
    1241 LAWER FREEMAN 17,994.52
    1242 IBRAHIM ALHASSAN ABUBAKARI 17,994.52
    1243 KUDADJI JOANA TEIKO LOAN A/C 17,994.52
    1244 BOWAN NAAB PASCHAL MARK 17,994.52
    1245 ELIZABETH ESSUMAN 17,994.52
    1246 ADAM ISSAHAKA 17,994.52
    1247 ASANTE YEBOAH OBED 17,994.52
    1248 ADWOA YEBOAH 17,994.52
    1249 A RAHAMAN MOHAMMED 17,994.52
    1250 ANDOH STEPHEN 17,994.52
    1251 DRORVU WISDOM 17,977.32
    1252 KWAKWA SOLOMON 17,958.53
    1253 KWAME BOATENG 17,942.30
    1254 ATUONI GYAU JOSEPH 17,940.54
    1255 ANKU MABEL 17,940.54
    1256 ALL POWERS BELONGS TO JESUS ENT 17,907.61
    1257 JOHN BLESSING 17,886.55
    1258 ARCHER REYNOLDS 17,886.55
    1259 ASAMOAH ANI 17,878.42
    1260 SAMUEL DEDE SASU 17,866.40
    1261 AMPAH ROSE 17,853.59
    1262 OWARE EDWARD 17,850.56
    1263 PIC LIMITED 17,844.45
    1264 ALANDURIT ENTERPRISE 17,832.46
    1265 SALIFU ABDULAI 17,814.76
    1266 ATTAH EFUA 17,814.58
    1267 ASANTE SOLOMON 17,814.29
    1268 AMADU ASANA 17,706.61
    1269 ESSEL-DOOMSON GODFRED 17,678.82
    1270 BOADI BARIMA AMPONIM 17,675.84
    1271 ESSUON HELENA 17,598.64
    1272 EWUSIE ENTERPRISE 17,536.67
    1273 JUSTICE ARTHUR 17,532.53
    1274 INTERNATIONAL SCHOOL PAA WILL 17,517.56
    1275 DONYINA ERNESTINA 17,511.44
    1276 FREDUA AGYEMAN NANA 17,501.47
    1277 PEARL OFORIWAA OWUSU 17,494.67
    1278 T. N. SUPERTRUST ENTERPRISE 17,464.26
    1279 DORCAS MENSAH 17,454.68
    1280 FYNN KWAMINA 17,454.68
    1281 ACHEAMPONG SAMUEL OFORI 17,454.68
    1282 AKAFSON ANTHONY HACKMAN 17,430.28
    1283 MENSAH SOLOMON 17,376.59
    1284 AWUAH FRANCIS 17,374.79
    1285 OWUSU-ANSAH GILBERT 17,349.17
    1286 BOAMA RICHARD K. 17,346.72
    1287 OSMAN GARIBA 17,274.74
    1288 SAMUEL TABI ANIM (1182000000055) 17,257.03
    1289 OGOE ANNA 17,247.57
    1290 OSEI HENRY 17,242.35
    1291 SIMPSOM ADDISON LEAH 17,229.39
    1292 AYAMBA ELORM ATINOTO JANET 17,225.33
    1293 HAQUE ZIA-UL- MOHAMMED 17,169.11
    1294 REBECCA YEBOAH 17,157.06
    1295 AKRONG EVELYN 17,148.56
    1296 QUANSAH JOHN 17,130.78
    1297 HOCKMAN KWAME SAMUEL 17,121.21
    1298 KWAKU KOOMSON 17,088.39
    1299 JANET BANASTAS NORIEGA 17,078.46
    1300 OMAN-OCRAN BENJAMIN 17,034.69
    1301 AGBEMABIASE SENAM BRIGITTE 17,033.18
    1302 YEBOAH ASIAMAH FRANCIS 17,005.22
    1303 ASIAMA AMOAKO KWADWO 17,004.86
    1304 AKORLEY ZENO 17,004.82
    1305 GAIPKA FREDERICK ATSU 16,994.67
    1306 BOAKYE DOUGLAS 16,983.23
    1307 TAWIAH MICHAEL 16,973.26
    1308 KOFI ADOMAKO 16,950.87
    1309 ASAMOAH COMFORT 16,928.09
    1310 AKOLBILA A ISAAC 16,916.29
    1311 HOSUNU VIDA 16,914.85
    1312 ANSAH ROBERT 16,911.14
    1313 ANDOS COLD STORE 16,899.37
    1314 ISSAHAKA SUMAILA 16,889.23
    1315 KOTEI BENARD 16,874.00
    1316 ATTA-MENSAH PERRY GEORGE 16,848.88
    1317 ATTAH AMO KWESI 16,824.88
    1318 PASSOVER SAMUEL BLESSED 16,812.50
    1319 IDDRISU ABDUL GANIYU 16,794.90
    1320 TALK MOBILE LINK ENTERPRISE 16,789.21
    1321 GOODMAN TLOKA JOSEPH 16,773.70
    1322 COLLIBRIGHT D. ENTERPRISE 16,767.83
    1323 ADU-GYAMFI KWAKU 16,748.15
    1324 AGADZI KOBBY BLESSYN 16,696.94
    1325 APPAU KWAME ISSAC 16,684.23
    1326 STEPHEN GYAWU 16,644.93
    1327 LINDA MUSS 16,605.27
    1328 AYITEY THOMPSON 16,600.70
    1329 TERRY TETTEH 16,594.98
    1330 SAMUEL KOOPE ANNAN 16,560.00
    1331 FREDERICK AMAMOO 16,554.96
    1332 PRINCE OMANE ENTERPRISE 16,532.43
    1333 CATHERINE EVANS -TOTOE 16,524.22
    1334 GEORGE NYARKO ASAMPONG 16,518.97
    1335 KALEDZI MABEL 16,518.86
    1336 LUCY KATANI OF DELTA SYSTEM 16,492.77
    1337 ISAAC A. ANAMANG 16,482.98
    1338 DADZIE EMELIA 16,480.25
    1339 ALORWORDOR JOHN 16,469.59
    1340 JOSEPH DONKOR 16,427.52
    1341 DARTEY ENOCH 16,416.90
    1342 NTOW BEATRICE 16,416.11
    1343 SATURE ENTERPRISE 16,407.22
    1344 NYINAKU KWASI SAMUEL 16,391.75
    1345 A- BITS SYSTEMS 16,354.57
    1346 SEIDU ABUBAKARI 16,351.76
    1347 IDDRISU RAPHA 16,338.84
    1348 TETTEH THERESA 16,321.03
    1349 KWAO WINFRED 16,305.59
    1350 HARRISON ACQUAH DANIEL 16,290.87
    1351 ADDEH FLORENCE 16,260.03
    1352 NYARKOA AMA 16,209.93
    1353 ODURO MATHIAS 16,195.07
    1354 OGUM GERTRUDE 16,195.07
    1355 IDDRISU AMINA 16,195.07
    1356 AHENKAN PRINCE OWURA KWABENA 16,177.07
    1357 KAKATI BEATRICE 16,159.08
    1358 BOTWE ASARE 16,121.94
    1359 ANAYA EMMANUEL 16,120.36
    1360 GILKAS GHANA LTD 16,068.85
    1361 DEY SENA 16,049.53
    1362 FRANK STONE NARROW VENTURES 16,046.76
    1363 BOAMAH KWAKU EMMANUEL 15,992.41
    1364 AMOANING JOHN 15,978.88
    1365 AWINI MBA 15,970.14
    1366 EMMANUEL HANSON 15,969.81
    1367 DIABA PATRICK 15,955.20
    1368 DOGBE PATRICK 15,946.89
    1369 NAOMICA VENTURES 15,923.35
    1370 AGURI IBRAHIM AYUMMA 15,904.64
    1371 MENSAH HANNAH 15,902.66
    1372 VIDA OFORI ENTERPRISE 15,902.30
    1373 HASSAN ABDULAI 15,896.14
    1374 KWANTWI DANIEL 15,884.16
    1375 MINTAH BENJAMIN 15,880.27
    1376 MANU FELIX 15,839.50
    1377 ISAAC BAFFOUR AWUAH 15,835.18
    1378 AFARI ALEX 15,787.17
    1379 AGBEVE GODWIN 15,747.18
    1380 NICHOLAS KWASEH ARIZI 15,745.21
    1381 MOHAMMED SEIDU 15,745.21
    1382 AWUKUTSE RUEBEN 15,745.21
    1383 ALEX FRIMPONG 15,745.21
    1384 ARTHUR THEOPHILUS 15,736.78
    1385 MUNAZAN ENTERPRISE 15,735.24
    1386 GEORGE BUADI 15,727.00
    1387 JUSTICE KWAKWA 15,725.59
    1388 ABONGO MOSES AMOSHIE 15,716.41
    1389 CLIFFORD AMOASI ROCKSON 15,691.22
    1390 QUARM ANGELINA 15,655.23
    1391 OWUSU WHITE VENTURES 15,646.31
    1392 TENI AYAABA 15,646.24
    1393 LARTEY JNR LAUD 15,634.11
    1394 KPEGAH GODFRED 15,630.83
    1395 PRAH PAUL PETER 15,625.97
    1396 BOATENG ESSEL AMOAKO 15,595.78
    1397 BOATENG KWADWO 15,595.38
    1398 DAVID OFORICA 15,591.78
    1399 ADVICE CLEANING SERVICES 15,587.36
    1400 ZOKLI GABRIEL 15,565.26
    1401 STEWARDS COMPANY LTD 15,552.23
    1402 LOGSHEGU ENT 15,547.27
    1403 ANO-ONUMAH JAMES 15,547.27
    1404 ANYINSAH FELIX H GREENE 15,535.39
    1405 ADJEI COLLINS 15,510.99
    1406 CHARLES OSEI BONSU 15,475.29
    1407 E.K. BOAHENE ENTERPRISE 15,474.93
    1408 SAMUEL BOAKYE 15,414.11
    1409 BUGNNABA ENTERPRISE 15,409.07
    1410 ALICGYEI ENTERPRISE 15,382.26
    1411 SARPONG DANSO PATIENCE 15,356.60
    1412 VICTOR BOAKYE 15,353.64
    1413 KWASI KAKU PAUL 15,349.15
    1414 QUICK EXPRESS 15,345.84
    1415 PS LOGISTICS AND CONSTRUCTION LTD 15,340.47
    1416 FAITH MOTHER CARE M-TEL ENTERPRISE 15,339.97
    1417 MARY OWUSUAA MARY OWUSUAA 15,331.33
    1418 BREMPONG MELODY EVELYN 15,331.33
    1419 WESTPALM INVESTMENT LTD 15,295.45
    1420 WILLIAM OBENG 15,249.35
    1421 CHRISTINA MBIR (1093) 15,241.36
    1422 OFOSU STEPHEN 15,240.82
    1423 AWUKU MANTEY 15,234.16
    1424 OWUSU-BREMANG JACOB 15,204.65
    1425 SARAH AFFUL (1182000000352) 15,189.03
    1426 MUTAWAKURU SAHUDATU 15,151.03
    1427 KWAME OWUSU 15,145.45
    1428 ADAE STEPHEN 15,127.38
    1429 OSEI YAW YAW ANDREWS 15,113.49
    1430 BARNES BEATRICE 15,061.05
    1431 OSEI TUTU MANU VENTURES 15,051.80
    1432 OWUSU KWABENA 15,007.43
    1433 FOSU OSEI ERIC 15,002.68
    1434 ATTAKORAH PRINCE AMANIAMPONG 15,001.42
    1435 PAULINA FRIMPONG 14,995.45
    1436 GREAT ANSAH FARMS 14,995.45
    1437 GENEVIVE K MENSAH 14,995.45
    1438 PLAHAR LESLIE T. 14,995.41
    1439 KORSAH ABENA AGYEIWAAH 14,995.41
    1440 WILSON KUMI 14,953.45
    1441 LYDIA AGYEIWAAH 14,938.04
    1442 MILE STREET MEDIA 14,899.46
    1443 EKUA KYEREBA CLARKE 14,895.50
    1444 KWABENA FRIMPONG MANSO 14,874.27
    1445 ESTHER T. ODOI 14,866.43
    1446 DEWS OF HEAVEN ENTERPRISE 14,820.40
    1447 ANTWIWAA OPPONG ELIZABETH 14,805.93
    1448 AGYAPONG YAA NANA 14,797.65
    1449 ADJEI KODOM 14,794.20
    1450 MOHAMMED ALHASSAN 14,730.67
    1451 AKOTSU WISDOM HARRY 14,695.55
    1452 ALEXANDER OBENG 14,642.83
    1453 OWUSU JOHN 14,635.48
    1454 MUSAH M ZAKARIA 14,575.56
    1455 HEHEALOLO VICTORIA 14,550.08
    1456 NYANKOM-ABABIO SOPHIA STELLA 14,539.57
    1457 AWOTWE KWEKU 14,539.57
    1458 OPARE LABI SIR GEORGE 14,522.26
    1459 DANSO ALBERT OPPONG 14,487.06
    1460 PETER MENSAH 14,472.88
    1461 AIDOO EMMANUEL 14,449.60
    1462 KONADU ELIZABETH 14,415.81
    1463 DOGBATSEY MARGARET 14,413.61
    1464 TAKYI OBIRI 14,412.06
    1465 SHADRACK OBENG NISSIN 14,395.62
    1466 RENE ADRIANA AMUAH 14,395.62
    1467 OWUSU MAVIS 14,395.62
    1468 STEPHEN ADDO 14,395.62
    1469 OWUSU ROSE 14,395.62
    1470 MADI ASIGRI B. 14,395.62
    1471 MUBASHIR ALHASSAN A 14,395.62
    1472 DAVID SOGBODJOR 14,395.62
    1473 GBOLOO EDMOND 14,395.62
    1474 DANAA ZIBLIM MANDEEYA 14,395.62
    1475 DARKO STEPHEN 14,395.62
    1476 HARRISON FOEH 14,395.62
    1477 BONSU MENSAH KINGSLEY NANA 14,395.62
    1478 ASAMOAH LETICIA 14,395.62
    1479 AMOAH MAVIS 14,395.62
    1480 AGNES AWUNI ADONGO 14,395.62
    1481 ABABIO KOFI FRANK 14,395.62
    1482 AZIZ ABDUL 14,395.62
    1483 ABUKARI ABDULAI 14,382.41
    1484 KWEKU BEDU 14,377.62
    1485 ESSUMAN -GYAMFI.FRANCIS KWEKU 14,377.62
    1486 KUSI SARFO 14,369.02
    1487 FELICITY PHYLLIS MENSAH (252) 14,366.25
    1488 ISAAC ONASIS QUAICOE 14,364.45
    1489 OMARI ASANTE PATRICK 14,359.63
    1490 AKROBOTU BEATRICE 14,359.63
    1491 AETEX PHARMA LTD 14,350.70
    1492 K. A. ELECTRICALS 14,332.42
    1493 DORIS M. ZOTU 14,331.48
    1494 ISAAC T.ANNAN (1185000000204) 14,305.64
    1495 KWAKU ANTWI 14,287.65
    1496 FRIMPONG ISAAC 14,261.09
    1497 AMITECON COMPANY LIMITED 14,259.61
    1498 GUANE ALIMA CORNELIUS 14,251.66
    1499 RUTH AGBEZUHLOR 14,215.67
    1500 CHARLOTTE NYARKO 14,215.67
    1501 SYLVANUS NNAMDI OKEKE 14,215.28
    1502 ACHEAMPONG ERIC 14,197.68
    1503 JOB JAKPLER DAMIGU 14,192.06
    1504 ANOKYE AWOTWE MICHEAL 14,191.05
    1505 ODURO NICHOLAS 14,180.58
    1506 KOOMSON ALICE 14,180.58
    1507 SIAW EDWARD 14,137.79
    1508 BAGYA BOOKS AND STATIONERY 14,113.17
    1509 ISAAC AMOAH (1185000000536) 14,107.70
    1510 SALIH CAROLINE 14,100.69
    1511 SAYIBU MOHAMMED 14,073.05
    1512 OFORI-BAMFO MARK 14,035.73
    1513 BAFFOUR AWUAH RICHARD 14,016.33
    1514 JOYCE APPIAH SARFO-KANTAKA (118500000013 13,999.74
    1515 MARTHA ASANTE 1041000001091 13,995.71
    1516 NYARKOH COMFORT 13,995.24
    1517 DAVID ASANTE 13,981.74
  • 1518 MOHAMMED ABDUL MALIK 13,966.52
    1519 DRAFOR KWAME OBED 13,961.55
    1520 OBIMPEH SAVIOUR 13,953.31
    1521 OPPONG KIMJEWEL DIANA 13,945.75
    1522 ERNEST AMANOR 13,912.32
    1523 BOWTEY KOBBY NANA 13,873.78
    1524 AMOAKO KWABENA MAXWELL 13,852.18
    1525 AMANKWAH MARFO AKWASI GEORGE 13,828.21
    1526 ONLY PRAYER CAN SAVE CO.LTD 13,817.38
    1527 HADZI SMART SETH 13,815.83
    1528 YAKUBU AWUDU ANANE 13,795.61
    1529 ROYAL INVESTMENT VENTURES 13,794.82
    1530 KLUTSE JOSEPH 13,765.81
    1531 AFUA TAKYIWAA POKU-TANDOH 13,755.88
    1532 FORDJOUR WILLIAM K 13,755.41
    1533 ARKH AMOASI ISAAC 13,747.06
    1534 QUAQUAH MARY AMA 13,729.82
    1535 ISSAH HAKIM 13,708.48
    1536 AFRAMA SALINA 13,703.58
    1537 ANSAH MAXWELL 13,667.56
    1538 ABOAGYE ALEX 13,652.01
    1539 AMEYAW MICHEAL 13,639.85
    1540 SARPONG ADELAIDE 13,625.34
    1541 LUGINAAH VINCENTIA 13,622.54
    1542 SEIDU ZIBRIM 13,603.86
    1543 AHIABLE MICHAEL 13,603.86
    1544 OWUSU SAMUEL 13,595.58
    1545 AFRIYIE SMC 15 AKUA 13,585.86
    1546 SARFO SAMUEL 13,573.77
    1547 YAKUBU HASSAN ALI 13,542.96
    1548 GEOJULI ENTERPRISE 13,515.07
    1549 DUMENU ELIZABETH 13,513.88
    1550 AGYEI ERIC 13,513.88
    1551 BARNOR N. LAWRENCE 13,510.29
    1552 DARKWAH OWUSU CHARLES 13,507.87
    1553 SAMUEL ESSEL 13,495.89
    1554 HAZIEL-COBBINAH W FRANCIS 13,495.89
    1555 SALAM ABUBAKARI 13,495.53
    1556 READER VENTURES 13,481.49
    1557 SUMAILA GYIMAH 13,467.10
    1558 ADU KOFI 13,418.23
    1559 BOADU AKUMAH MARY 13,392.78
    1560 JOHN BOTWE 13,387.92
    1561 ANYAKWA-POAKWA ADWOA 13,387.92
    1562 WATARA YAKUBU 13,384.72
    1563 FOSU KAFUI SABINA 13,363.81
    1564 DOSOO STELLA 13,357.01
    1565 BANYAOLENSO K. MATHIAS 13,339.37
    1566 MOHAMMED RAMATU JANIS 13,325.84
    1567 WILSON EWUSIE 13,308.82
    1568 ABUGRE AMOAH 13,243.97
    1569 APPIAH MARTHA 13,217.01
    1570 ISSAH MOHAMMED FAISAL 13,195.99
    1571 ALLOTEY NAA ADORKOR SHARON 13,195.99
    1572 MANASSEH CHRISTIAN INT’L SCH. 13,194.70
    1573 AGYEMANG SERWAA AKOSUA 13,184.26
    1574 KAKU JOSEPH 13,168.39
    1575 APPIAH AKWASI 13,165.15
    1576 POKU KOFI VICTOR 13,152.23
    1577 WILLIAMS KWAME 13,136.00
    1578 HAWA ZAKARI 13,125.20
    1579 NYARKO BEATRICE 13,114.98
    1580 OWUSU KINGSLEY 13,103.32
    1581 GYASI SYLVIA 13,064.02
    1582 ASAMOAH JOHN 13,056.82
    1583 I.T ALMIGHTYS 13,050.31
    1584 COMFORT MENSAH 13,016.80
    1585 LASCO CONSTRUCTION & ENGINEERING WORKS 13,002.95
    1586 AMPONSAH ISAAC 13,001.94
    1587 DODOVI ANITA 12,996.00
    1588 TUKPEYI STEPHEN W. 12,975.02
    1589 AHOSE JOSEPHINE ESINAM 12,974.09
    1590 PUODONG AMAMATA 12,956.05
    1591 ADAMS EMMANUEL 12,956.05
    1592 ACHEAMPONG FREDERICK 12,955.37
    1593 MILLENNIUM 2000 COMPLEX LIMITED 12,941.95
    1594 ARKORFUL MARY 12,938.96
    1595 AMOAKWAH STEPHEN 12,934.28
    1596 RUTH BUADII 12,929.13
    1597 LEVE STEPHEN 12,902.07
    1598 BAIDOO ERIC 12,902.07
    1599 EMMANUEL YEBOAH 12,891.31
    1600 NHYIRAH SIMON 12,884.44
    1601 HASFORD LAWRENCIA 12,884.44
    1602 OSEI-BONSU CYNTHIA 12,884.08
    1603 EMMANUEL ADU SIAW 12,883.61
    1604 SENKYIRE KUMI AGYEMANG 12,876.73
    1605 YIBOR KOKOU JOSEPH 12,870.33
    1606 GUARANTY CONCRETE WORKS 12,857.52
    1607 NYANKO DO TRADERS ASS 12,849.89
    1608 EX-SGT EMMANUEL OSEI SEFA 12,843.80
    1609 CONSTANCE ASSAN 12,782.01
    1610 ISSAH YAKUBU 12,776.11
    1611 AMANKWAA ROBERT TANO 12,773.05
    1612 ANNOBIL KWESI 12,768.91
    1613 OSABUTEY KOFI 12,762.18
    1614 OBED ANSAH 12,760.63
    1615 TAWIAH FRANCIS 12,743.97
    1616 HAYFORD MAVIS 12,736.16
    1617 KORANG YEBOAH OBIRI 12,709.35
    1618 ESSIEN JOSEPH 12,706.61
    1619 KUFUOR ERNEST 12,686.14
    1620 TWENEBOAH FRANCIS 12,679.44
    1621 FORIWAH AMA 12,672.32
    1622 ADUONUM MICHEAL 12,667.85
    1623 SARKODIE SAMUEL 12,646.05
    1624 ANAMAN NAOMI 12,638.27
    1625 OFORIWAA RUTH 12,633.23
    1626 ERIC KWEKU LAWSON 12,619.92
    1627 AMPONSAH PAUL 12,612.72
    1628 SARAH OTOO & MOHAMMED ISMALIA 12,604.37
    1629 BONNEY AWULEY NII 12,601.31
    1630 KYERE CHARLES 12,598.72
    1631 VICTORIA KOFIE 12,596.16
    1632 FLORENCE VROOM 12,596.16
    1633 ERIC YEWAH 12,596.16
    1634 BOATENG KELVIN PEPRAH 12,596.16
    1635 APANA AMADU 12,596.16
    1636 AWUAKYE NANA JONES 12,596.16
    1637 ATOO ATIA 12,596.16
    1638 AFISA ADAMU 12,596.16
    1639 AKURU TAHIRU 12,596.16
    1640 AMADU MOHAMMMED 12,596.16
    1641 ABU IBRAHIM 12,592.89
    1642 BRONG AHAFO PRINTERS LTD 12,590.51
    1643 MOSES DUKER 12,578.17
    1644 SACKEY K.M JUSTICE 12,576.59
    1645 F-27 VENTURES 12,567.45
    1646 KAMINTA KELVIN 12,562.48
    1647 KONADU YAW 12,560.18
    1648 KENNETH BOSU 12,557.91
    1649 ERIC KWASI KYERE 12,546.43
    1650 DETSHE KWABENA CLEMENT 12,542.43
    1651 TAYLOR EMMANUEL 12,542.18
    1652 CALGRACE COMPANY LTD 12,518.10
    1653 ATANGA BUKARI 12,516.99
    1654 ATANGA IBRAHIM 12,515.91
    1655 APPOH NYAMENLEAYEH NATHANAEL 12,496.15
    1656 YVONE TAKYI-MENSAH 12,495.40
    1657 QUICKCHANGE COMPANY LTD 12,495.07
    1658 TODOE WILLIAM 12,491.80
    1659 AGYEI SOLOMON 12,491.62
    1660 DINA AHOR 12,491.51
    1661 ALORNYO PASTOR RAPHAEL 12,488.20
    1662 MOHAMMED ADAMA 12,478.19
    1663 QUARCOO SAMUEL 12,434.21
    1664 AYI KANI 12,434.21
    1665 ABBAN EMELIA 12,426.15
    1666 ASIGBE CHRISTOPHER 12,416.22
    1667 LADIN NYLANDER 12,410.24
    1668 SOLOMON DUNYAGINA 12,396.25
    1669 ODURO BOAMPONG 12,389.44
    1670 MILLICENT MARFO 12,387.43
    1671 AKROFI GEOGINA 12,386.10
    1672 ADOKOH K. ISAAC 12,380.23
    1673 NANGOR STOUNDY 12,371.77
    1674 MARFO OWUSU STEPHEN 12,369.54
    1675 SAMUEL TWEIKU 12,362.24
    1676 DZAMEKA ENTERPRISE 12,350.29
    1677 ADZA-YAO CONSTANCE KUMA 12,290.58
    1678 BADUA EKUA 12,272.26
    1679 MENSAH EMMANUEL 12,248.87
    1680 AFERDI KENE JOHN 12,240.48
    1681 PATRICK AYELGUM 12,236.27
    1682 ADONGO ALBERT 12,236.27
    1683 AMEHERE MAXWELL 12,222.99
    1684 EKELATU AFUA 12,177.79
    1685 ISAAC AGYEI 12,149.40
    1686 NANDANYON PHILIP 12,124.71
    1687 FILOA ENT 12,118.34
    1688 KUMI FRANCIS 12,113.05
    1689 ABUBAKAR MOHAMMED HADIZA 12,110.31
    1690 ABDUL FATAWU NAMAWU 12,109.02
    1691 AKPOR DANIEL 12,081.13
    1692 DABAHAZAAYA YINBIL RAMSON 12,078.14
    1693 IDDRISU MOHAMMED KAMALDEEN 12,074.00
    1694 MENSAH KENETH KUDZO 12,049.13
    1695 MICAEMIX VENTURES 12,026.93
    1696 OPOKU-MENSAH EMMANUEL 12,020.34
    1697 IDDRISU ABDUL-LATIF 12,020.34
    1698 ENIMPAH CARLOS JOSEPH 12,020.34
    1699 G NTI ANTHONY 12,020.34
    1700 WAHABU ABDILAI 12,008.68
    1701 TENKORANG ANDY 11,996.37
    1702 AFEDI FELICIA 11,995.22
    1703 KHRISTON INDUSTRIES LIMITED 11,991.69
    1704 ANSONG OPOKU JOHN 11,990.94
    1705 ADOM ISAAC 11,984.35
    1706 SAHADATU ALHASSAN 11,972.26
    1707 SANDRA NYAM 11,968.88
    1708 B F BALSHALISHA VENTURES 11,968.80
    1709 DANIEL AKWESI PERKOH 11,967.36
    1710 A. BOADU PREPRAH 11,963.69
    1711 JOHN KOBINA BAIDOO 11,960.53
    1712 OTENG VICTORIA 11,935.84
    1713 ASSAFUAH EMMANUEL 11,923.17
    1714 DANSO ISAAC 11,905.25
    1715 WIAFE SMC 26 DOREED 11,888.37
    1716 EDMOND KYEI BAFFOUR 11,879.44
    1717 BENJAMIN BLANKSON 11,876.38
    1718 BAIDEN EMMANUEL 11,869.22
    1719 OSMAN ISSAH BADUNA 11,858.68
    1720 KWAKU BOATENG 11,858.25
    1721 ASARE JEFFREY 11,844.89
    1722 GAIKPA KOFI GEORGE 11,837.16
    1723 AL-FAD COMPANY LIMITED 11,836.11
    1724 OPPEY YAW STEPHEN 11,793.79
    1725 OWUSU AGNES 11,786.41
    1726 K.GEE SPARE PARTS ENT. 11,786.41
    1727 DONEWELL LIFE COMPANY LIMITED 11,776.77
    1728 MOHAMMED HAWA 11,768.78
    1729 CEETA INUSA 11,737.14
    1730 MUSAH ALHASSAN GEORGE 11,696.01
    1731 AGYERAKOR ARMSTRONG B 11,692.84
    1732 YAMOAH AFRIFA 11,688.88
    1733 ALALE HARUNA 11,666.78
    1734 KWABOH CYNTHIA 11,664.05
    1735 SOWAH SAMUEL 11,660.20
    1736 NYANTAKYI ENOCK 11,647.06
    1737 MERSHACK AMOH 11,636.44
    1738 WINWAY JOHN CONSTRUCTION CO. LTD. 11,635.19
    1739 OSEI AMSTRONG KOFI 11,614.28
    1740 SAMUEL GODFRED MENSAH ENT. 11,613.27
    1741 YAHAYA MUSAH 11,588.47
    1742 APURI JOHN 11,588.47
    1743 ASARE RUBEN HUSBIL 11,583.72
    1744 HEVOR ABIGAIL 11,575.16
    1745 NTIEDU-BOATENG PETER 11,564.54
    1746 VICTOR ATEEBRA NABIA 11,557.34
    1747 AFFUL KINGSLEY WINFRED 11,552.48
    1748 YEBOAH JOHNSON 11,546.51
    1749 KOMALCOM VENTURES 11,541.40
    1750 BABA SADIQ YAKUBU 11,538.09
    1751 JOYCE KWAKYE 11,532.69
    1752 BOAKYE YIADOM EMMANUEL 11,526.89
    1753 ADDY SABINA QUARTEY 11,516.49
    1754 ABDALLAH RAKIA 11,516.49
    1755 ATUAHENE JULIANA 11,516.49
    1756 APPIAH KOFI 11,513.79
    1757 AWAH DORIS 11,512.89
    1758 PATRICIA KUMI 11,500.05
    1759 APPIAH SAMUEL 11,495.69
    1760 TETTEY ESI 11,491.16
    1761 EMMANUEL KWAKU OPPONG 11,480.36
    1762 DEBRAH K WILLIAM 11,477.05
    1763 NSUA -AYIM KODZO 11,473.31
    1764 AYEH MICHAEL SHARDEY 11,468.09
    1765 MPEREH ABRAHAM VICTOR 11,462.80
    1766 APPIAGYEI KWABENA 11,460.28
    1767 ALHASSAN HAMIDU 11,455.02
    1768 ASIEDU-POKU KWAME 11,437.35
    1769 AGBOTTAH ODARTEY FREDERICK 11,430.23
    1770 STANLEY KATTAH 11,418.46
    1771 DE-GOZAH KITSON 11,407.59
    1772 BIDI JERIMIAH 11,398.16
    1773 OPPONG COMFORT 11,396.54
    1774 NUNOO ANNEAL 11,396.54
    1775 DZOTSI GLADYS 11,381.35
    1776 KWEKU BOATENG 949 11,372.54
    1777 ALEX OSEI BONSU 11,365.34
    1778 METRO TILES ENTERPRISE 11,359.01
    1779 AGYEMANG OWUSU DANIEL 11,354.54
    1780 VICENTIA BANSAH 11,341.51
    1781 FRIDAY FOREVER ENTERPRISE 11,338.17
    1782 ASIEDU OLIVIA 11,336.55
    1783 ACKON JOSEPH 11,336.55
    1784 AMISSAH FRANCIS 11,336.55
    1785 LYDIA AGYEKUM-NKANSAH 11,332.12
    1786 BERNARD AGYEI 11,322.15
    1787 TETTEY ASHONG JOHN 11,316.79
    1788 NAOMI ABOAGYE POMAA/ SEM ALBER 11,315.13
    1789 SEWAH AMA 11,272.06


    1790 DORIS EFUA BAIDOO (825) 11,264.57
    1791 MICHAEL DUA MENSAH 11,257.12
    1792 BOADU ANKOMAH 11,230.02
    1793 MENSAH ROLANDRIA 11,228.58
    1794 JAMES KANTANKA SARFO 11,225.56
    1795 ANSAH MARGARET 11,206.45
    1796 FIAKUNAH SAMUEL 11,199.21
    1797 DAGODZO K. CLEMENT MENSAH 11,191.84
    1798 ABADOO-BREW QUOBE ALFRED 11,188.38
    1799 EMMANUEL BOHAM 11,170.46
    1800 CHARLES OWUSU 11,144.29
    1801 LEEDS CIVIL CONSULT LTD 11,141.49
    1802 SARPONG JACKSON 11,135.87
    1803 ADJEI ABRAHAM 11,135.69
    1804 ADDO JOHN MARK 11,131.52
    1805 ABENA SERWAA 11,120.61
    1806 AMINU ASANA 11,109.82
    1807 REJOICE WOZUAME 11,102.62
    1808 ATTRAMS CHRISTINA 11,102.62
    1809 SAMUEL YAWSON 11,100.10
    1810 FLORZY STORES ENTERPRISE(CORPORAT CURRENT) (11840 11,091.39
    1811 GEORGE DUNYO 11,053.93
    1812 ISAIAH OBENG 11,048.64
    1813 EMMANUEL ARTHUR 11,048.64
    1814 COFFIE EMMANUEL 11,046.66
    1815 ADJEI VIDA 11,035.79
    1816 BOAKYE RICHARD 11,028.45
    1817 LAARI JERRY KANGBO 11,016.71
    1818 EMMANUEL ADOM 11,016.25
    1819 ANTOBAM AGNES 11,013.19
    1820 BIO VERONICA 11,009.77
    1821 AYISI RUTH 11,009.55
    1822 NBINGE PROSPER BABA 11,008.33
    1823 ANDERSON MOHAMMED NYARKO 11,005.63
    1824 YEBOAH JAMES ADU 10,994.65
    1825 TETE SALOME AMAKUOR 10,989.90
    1826 ISAAC KOBINA DONKOR 10,976.66
    1827 KOFI AKANDEM 10,976.37
    1828 EXILDER BENTIL 10,967.66
    1829 IBRAHIM IDDRISU (1185000000296) 10,934.66
    1830 ADU-TWUM FOSU DANIEL 10,934.41
    1831 BOTWE YAW 10,904.68
    1832 BASHIRU MAHAMA 10,904.68
    1833 KUMI-KORSAH OBO KODWO 10,898.20
    1834 ISRAEL DZITRIE 10,886.65
    1835 AMOATENG LUCY 10,885.64
    1836 MUSAH AMIN 10,836.30
    1837 TWUMASI MOHAMMED 10,824.75
    1838 SAMUEL APPIAH EA 10,824.21
    1839 ANNOR NGOAH BRUNO 10,821.90
    1840 RAYMOND ASAANA BUKARI 10,807.51
    1841 OPOKU AGYEI GODFRED 10,798.40
    1842 QUARTEY CHARLES 10,796.71
    1843 SIMPSON JAMES 10,796.71
    1844 TAHIRU AYISHETU 10,796.71
    1845 JOHN ANDOH 10,796.71
    1846 BISON EMMANUEL 10,796.71
    1847 FATAWU SEIDU 10,796.71
    1848 GARCHIE NANA WILLIAM 10,796.71
    1849 CHARLES .K ADDO 10,796.71
    1850 ASANTE HAGAN VIDA 10,796.71
    1851 ADUSU ABAYAH 10,796.71
    1852 AHMOAH DAWSON NANA 10,791.46
    1853 BONSU ELI 10,789.51
    1854 DADIZE PHILIP 10,788.36
    1855 FRANCIS AMUZU KPORGBE 10,778.72
    1856 OPPONG YAW 10,777.57
    1857 BRONO VENTURES 10,772.64
    1858 HUDU ALHASSAN ENTERPRISE 10,755.40
    1859 BISMARK DADZIE (1185000000223) 10,724.73
    1860 francis akpo ibrahim 10,723.94
    1861 PHILOMENA WILSON 10,718.87
    1862 SETINA NUNOO 10,713.36
    1863 NWOKONLA MIEZAH 10,688.75
    1864 BAIDOO KOFI 10,688.42
    1865 YUSASS COMPANY LIMITED 10,675.18
    1866 PATRICK APPIAH KODUA 10,642.72
    1867 HOPE ELIJAH 10,623.39
    1868 DOGBE KWAME JOHANNES 10,623.07
    1869 P.A.K. GLOBAL LIMITED 10,622.17
    1870 AHORLU HELLEN 10,620.37
    1871 YEKEEN SILIFA 10,620.33
    1872 OPPONG ADJEI SAMPSON 10,616.77
    1873 AGYEMANG ISAAC 10,615.22
    1874 AMPONSAH RICHARD 10,609.71
    1875 MOHAMMED FUSEIN 10,602.37
    1876 NTIAKO JOHN 10,591.21
    1877 OPOKU EUNICE 10,591.14
    1878 TIPAGYA ROYAL COMPANY LIMITED 10,581.07
    1879 ARMAH GLORY 10,580.78
    1880 ACHEAMPONG ANDREWS 10,580.78
    1881 YEBOAH ESTHER 10,577.54
    1882 MOSES TEYE 10,569.98
    1883 MENSAH STEPHEN 10,566.06
    1884 PRINCE ARTHUR 10,551.99
    1885 RICHAM FARMS 10,542.41
    1886 IKE JOY CO LTD 10,500.20
    1887 THOVICO ENTERPRISE 10,489.08
    1888 ADABLAH FREDERICK 10,483.61
    1889 BOATENG BROW JOSEPH 10,472.38
    1890 TAGOE EMMANUEL 10,469.00
    1891 ISSAH ABDALLAH 10,460.90
    1892 QUARCOO MORGAN 10,445.68
    1893 FREEMAN MORKLI 10,436.82
    1894 YAHAYA IBRAHIM 10,429.62
    1895 KENNEDY GYAU 10,383.34
    1896 MR ADAMS -MENSAH ISAIAH 10,378.38
    1897 MEMUNA MASAHUDU 10,377.04
    1898 ADOM SMC 4 FRANCIS 10,376.86
    1899 DAVID OSEI-WUSU 10,375.64
    1900 KWAKU AGYEMANG DUAH 10,373.09
    1901 OWUSU GEORGE 10,372.69
    1902 AIDOO KINGSLEY JOHN 10,364.84
    1903 PAUL S REHOBOTH VENTURES 10,360.38
    1904 OSEI CHRISTIANA 10,356.82
    1905 ARHIN NANCY 10,346.85
    1906 ASIEDU SUZANNA 10,300.78
    1907 SAMPSON YAW ODAME 10,292.87
    1908 SUNU JOHN 10,292.87
    1909 NIMELY KWADWO DOMINIC 10,285.88
    1910 AMANKWAAH CHARLES 10,272.75
    1911 GRACE COMMEY 10,256.88
    1912 AL-YASEEN VENTURES 10,254.21
    1913 AYAMBILLA AWUDU 10,238.88
    1914 AKORLI LAWRENCE KWAW 10,228.37
    1915 BENYIN STEPHEN 10,219.81
    1916 NKANSAH RICHMOND 10,219.23
    1917 SAMUEL ATTA GHUNNEY 10,217.50
    1918 ANTWI ERIC 10,207.21
    1919 MENSAH DORA 10,198.75
    1920 LETICIA YEBOAH 10,191.30
    1921 LYDIA ASANTE 10,159.99
    1922 ENNINFUL DOREEN 10,159.06
    1923 DANIEL KOFI SONO 10,149.09
    1924 ABDUL-RAFIU ALHASSAN 10,148.91
    1925 SULEMANA ABIBA 10,123.83
    1926 BAAYEH AISHA 1045000001795 10,121.92
    1927 AFRIFA KODJO 10,120.12
    1928 AJARA KARIM 10,112.92
    1929 LINDA-EVE AIKINS-KOUAKOU 10,095.79
    1930 DREAM WORKS CONSULT 10,093.56
    1931 EDU-GLOBAL RESOURCE GH LTD 10,087.33
    1932 GHUNNEY ATTA SAMUEL 10,070.85
    1933 AMPONG JUSTICE 10,064.98
    1934 ANKAMAH JOSEPH KWABENA 10,040.98
    1935 ASIRIFIWAA LINDA 10,040.94
    1936 OFU COSMOS LYNUS 10,022.95
    1937 KOFI ASANTE 10,007.04
    1938 BADU KWAME 9,997.58
    1939 PRISCILLA OGOE 9,996.93
    1940 SARPONG ABIGAIL 9,996.89
    1941 QUANSAH ELIZABETH 9,994.16
    1942 N & B LINK COMPANY LTD 9,990.67
    1943 JUSRO SOLUTIONS 9,977.57
    1944 THOMAS AGYEI 9,943.77
    1945 ESHUN MENSAH FORSTER 9,931.61
    1946 ABUKARI ALHASSAN 9,928.44
    1947 ELIZABETH JOHNSON 9,922.18
    1948 IDDIRISU MOHAMMED AWAL 9,899.22
    1949 IBRAHIM GIBRIL 9,896.99
    1950 ABABIO THEODORA 9,896.99
    1951 ADU FLORENCE 9,896.99
    1952 IBRAHIM ZAKARI C/A 9,894.14
    1953 AL-HUSEIN MOHAMMED NURUDEENU 9,893.39
    1954 FAAGO ENTERPRISE 9,887.05
    1955 KYEREME OBENG IVY 9,884.39
    1956 LARM SAMUEL 9,878.99
    1957 NSOH AKURUGU 9,878.63
    1958 EMMANUEL KODUAH 9,863.23
    1959 ADJEI ASA EDWIN 9,862.94
    1960 EFO – MAMA FAUSTY (ANNEX) 9,858.91
    1961 KENPONG CONST.LTD.OVERDRAFT 9,843.25
    1962 REV. ANDOH BLAY DANIEL 9,843.00
    1963 OHENE RICHARD 9,829.25
    1964 THEOPHILUS MENSAH 9,825.08
    1965 KWADWO OWUSU AGYEMAN 9,819.61
    1966 MENSAH ERIC 9,807.91
    1967 AKU-ENGE MORDECAL 9,789.02
    1968 RAHMAN ABDUL 9,763.11
    1969 ARTHUR DANFUL JOHN 9,746.26
    1970 SHUMSUDDIN ALIDU 9,745.80
    1971 ANAN DANIEL 9,729.42
    1972 DUAH KWEKU EMMANUEL 9,726.40
    1973 YEBOAH. K. DANIEL. 9,723.45
    1974 OSAFO CHRISTIAN 9,718.48
    1975 SOSSOE VICTOR 9,717.04
    1976 YAKUBU KASSIM 9,717.04
    1977 MOHAMMED YAKUBU 9,717.04
    1978 ASANTE THOMAS 9,717.04
    1979 BUWAH LIMITED 9,716.07
    1980 PAUL KWAKYE 9,713.66
    1981 BEC-DE CONSTR. & SUPERMKT LTD 9,713.01
    1982 SARFO .K. REXFORD 9,711.89
    1983 NARTET ERNEST 9,698.76
    1984 CUDJOE DUKU ANTHONY 9,693.29
    1985 MR EMMANUEL KODWO WILLIAMS (11820000000 9,664.68
    1986 AFOAKWA DANIEL 9,652.66
    1987 ANKRAH EKOW SAMUEL 9,645.06
    1988 ABADOO JOVITIA ANNA 9,630.67
    1989 FELIX HANSON NUNOO (965) 9,630.31
    1990 ANDREW AFRIYE OPOKU 9,628.47
    1991 QUAICOE PHILIP 9,624.26
    1992 ANTWIWAA FAUSTINA 9,612.67
  • 1993 LIZYAMP VENTURES 9,611.81
    1994 JOSIAH ROWLAND 9,609.07
    1995 ADDAE GEORGE 9,609.07
    1996 DORIS KORKOR ALOI 9,603.06
    1997 ERIC STEPHEN NTIM 9,590.90
    1998 KONADU ISAAC 9,587.12
    1999 ENT MERCY IS ALLAH 9,584.82
    2000 POKU YAW 9,577.73
    2001 YAW BOAMAH POKU 9,577.73
    2002 OBOH PETER K 9,571.90
    2003 SALOMEY AMANKWAH 9,569.49
    2004 DARKU ISAIAH 9,567.69
    2005 AMADI HALIDU 9,554.69
    2006 ANSAH MARTHA 9,540.44
    2007 AYIMAH KWABENA 9,537.10
    2008 ARTHUR FRANCIS 9,537.10
    2009 KWAKYE JANET 9,536.23
    2010 AGYAPONG BAAH KWABENA 9,513.92
    2011 TAWIAH SOPHIA 9,511.54
    2012 DONKOH COMFORT 9,483.11
    2013 SADICK ABUBAKAR LUKEMAN 9,481.38
    2014 PAANAGHART ENTERPRISE 9,478.36
    2015 GEORGINA KRANTENG 9,468.32
    2016 IBRAHIM FAUZIA 9,447.12
    2017 PREMPEH OFOSUHENE RICHARD 9,447.12
    2018 SEREBOUR OKYERE DANIEL 9,429.13
    2019 REV.FR. ESHUN KWAMINA RAPHEAL 9,423.69
    2020 COBBINAH RICHARD 9,397.49
    2021 BURTEY JELIYA BEN 9,394.04
    2022 AYAMGA TENI PENINNAH 9,393.14
    2023 KABAMAT VENTURES 9,378.64
    2024 DAVID ENNINFUL (1182000000028) 9,366.58
    2025 MAHAMA AKASOMA 9,364.35
    2026 ABDU UMORU K 9,357.15
    2027 ARTHUR GILBERT JOSEPH 9,345.56
    2028 OFORI FREDRICK 9,342.76
    2029 GHARTEY ERNEST 9,321.16
    2030 TEI RICHARD 9,303.49
    2031 MENSAH HOPE REXFORD 9,301.15
    2032 LUMOR DUVOR KWADZO WISDOM 9,294.39
    2033 VIVIAN DZAMESI 9,291.83
    2034 AMOAK ROCKYFELLA MARKWELL 9,285.75
    2035 QUAYE K. RICHARD 9,285.17
    2036 IDEY ABDURAMANI 9,281.18
    2037 ANAMBON JOSEPH 9,277.29
    2038 ASANTE GEORGE SASU 9,277.11
    2039 LARBI ANSAH ALEXANDER 9,258.83
    2040 BAAH EDWARD 9,227.37
    2041 MARK OPPONG BOSSMAN 9,218.45
    2042 AFUN STEPHEN 9,214.42
    2043 NURUDEEN AWUDU 9,202.90
    2044 ABU LATIF 9,199.59
    2045 BRIKUH NELSON 9,194.98
    2046 PREMPEH N.K. FRANCIS 9,183.86
    2047 MOHAMMED MUSTAPHA 9,178.68
    2048 KOFI ABREFA 9,178.21
    2049 MENSAH KENNETH ANANE 9,177.24
    2050 DAVID BOAKYE KWABENA 9,177.21
    2051 OSEI KWABENA 9,176.23
    2052 DORIS AMPONSAH GYAMFI 9,175.80
    2053 MUSTAPHA MOHAMMED 9,159.21
    2054 ATSONGLO RAPHAEL 9,135.53
    2055 YEBOAH JULIANA 9,132.22
    2056 OSEI KWAME 9,115.48
    2057 ELIZABETH TORKORNOO 9,110.55
    2058 ISSAH MOHAMMED ALHASSAN 9,105.23
    2059 FLORENCE OFEIBEA FORSON 9,069.24
    2060 JOE NTI BOATENG JOE NTI BOATENG JOE NTI BOATENG 9,068.81
    2061 ANNAN JOYCE 9,066.79
    2062 ISSAH ABU 9,058.44
    2063 HAGAR BOATENG 9,051.24
    2064 OPPONG STEPHEN 9,048.98
    2065 SAHARA ABDUL MUMUNI 9,048.47
    2066 OPOKUA AKOSUA LINDA 9,048.22
    2067 BEMPAH OWUSU ERIC 9,039.76
    2068 CARTEY EBENEZER 9,033.25
    2069 AMIHERE MAXWELL 9,024.00
    2070 OFORI NICHOLAS 9,012.88
    2071 AIKINS SAMUEL 9,011.37
    2072 YAO WOSSE 9,000.93
    2073 PRAH ROBERT KOFI 8,997.33
    2074 OTCHIE MERCY 8,997.30
    2075 COMFORT ADOMAKO 8,997.26
    2076 AWUDU BELINLEL A 8,997.26
    2077 AWUKUBEA CECILIA 8,997.26
    2078 ADDO MARIAN 8,997.19
    2079 HANNAHTHIEL ENTERPRISE 8,972.43
    2080 NETORKA SETH 8,961.27
    2081 MWINNYERAH GEORGE 8,956.59
    2082 YEBOAH BOATENG MARGARET 8,945.08
    2083 BOAKYE ERNEST KOFI FOFIE 8,931.80
    2084 ASAMOAH PETER 8,926.69
    2085 ESTHER APPIAH KUBI 8,925.28
    2086 AKWASI OPPONG KWARTENG 8,925.21
    2087 OWUSU KWABENA FRANK 8,924.99
    2088 LAWRENCE POKU KORANKYE 8,920.35
    2089 AGBO YVETTE 8,889.29
    2090 ADU DANIEL 8,888.47
    2091 JOHN LAWSON 8,887.85
    2092 BEDIESO LIBERTY ASSOCIATION 8,867.09
    2093 MENSAH KWAKU 8,864.68
    2094 VICTORIA ADADE 8,861.69
    2095 NANA NSIAH 8,860.50
    2096 IRENE MICHELLE COMPANY LMTED 8,848.41
    2097 AGYEMAN STEPHEN 8,840.78
    2098 APPEATU NANA KWASI 8,839.41
    2099 ADAM YAKUBU CHAMBAS SHERIFA 8,828.18
    2100 ABIDZAWU SALI DELALI 8,810.12
    2101 SAKYI JOSEPH 8,803.42
    2102 KWAMINA OLLENU AMPONSAH DADZIE 8,801.98
    2103 OSEI OWUSU ISAAC 8,797.38
    2104 JOHN K. ANKAI- MACADIOO (1182000000130) 8,785.54
    2105 GYESIE SAMUEL 8,781.33
    2106 MISHARK COLLECTION 8,780.17
    2107 SEKYERE KWABENA 8,768.87
    2108 RICHARD AMANKWAH 8,757.86
    2109 YEBOAH KWABENA 8,755.27
    2110 DZISAH EMMANUEL 8,752.93
    2111 BROWN DESMOND 8,747.42
    2112 OWUSU JOSEPH 8,745.34
    2113 NSOR EVELYN 8,745.34
    2114 FLAVIA AWANKUA AZISARE 8,728.10
    2115 ODAME INVESTMENTS LIMITED 8,703.95
    2116 BOANSI KWAME JOSEPH 8,694.95
    2117 ADANSONIA BUSINESS VENTURES AND FARMS 8,686.89
    2118 KPODO AMENYO MCJOY 8,679.33
    2119 KID ENTERPRISE 8,642.91
    2120 OPPONG FRANCIS 8,641.22
    2121 NYARKO YAA 8,637.41
    2122 ESSUMAN ALEX 8,637.37
    2123 HANIFATU ABAKARI 8,637.37
    2124 BAGAH AMATUS 8,637.37
    2125 FRANCIS S. ACQUAYE 8,619.38
    2126 GBEDEMAH EMMANUEL 8,619.38
    2127 BULLEY RUBEN 8,619.38
    2128 FAMEYEH RANDOLPH 8,614.30
    2129 OPPONG-AMPONSAH NANA 8,610.02
    2130 OPARE ISAAC 8,601.38
    2131 CHARLES ANSAH 8,601.38
    2132 ABODONE MODESTA 8,599.04
    2133 MUSTAPHA ISSAKA 8,592.31
    2134 GYAN FRIMPONG RICHARD 8,586.52
    2135 ABDUL RAHAMAN ISSAKA 8,585.11
    2136 ASARE JOSEPH 8,580.87
    2137 AGBANATI ABRA 8,547.40
    2138 ISSAH ISSAU 8,533.00
    2139 SALIFU EMURANA 8,529.04
    2140 LARBI WILLIAMS 8,529.04
    2141 HATTOH EDEM NUNYA 8,507.81
    2142 SOLOMON OWIA BONDZIE QUAYE 8,502.27
    2143 MATHEW SINBONAA 8,501.08
    2144 OCRAN-MENSAH KOMLA JOACHIM 8,499.89
    2145 NKETSIAH SAEED MOHAMMED 8,493.41
    2146 HELEN AYINBILA 8,489.81
    2147 ADOKPAH ESTHER 8,488.05
    2148 ADDAE BISMARK 8,482.69
    2149 KUMOR PATRICK K. B. 8,475.42
    2150 JACOB AYARIBIRE 8,468.51
    2151 ABDUL RASHA 8,468.22
    2152 PHILOMENA BAIDOO 8,466.57
    2153 MENSAH SOWAH ROBERT 8,465.92
    2154 DORA ALAVI 8,457.42
    2155 DAVIS FRANK 8,456.17
    2156 KWARTENG FRANCIS 8,453.29
    2157 EMMANUEL K NUNEKPEKU 8,451.70
    2158 MAHAMA NAJARA 8,438.57
    2159 ABU IDDRISU 8,433.53
    2160 DONTOH SUSANA 8,426.83
    2161 ABDALLAH ISSAHAK 8,425.03
    2162 ROBERTANDOH (1185000001126) 8,410.28
    2163 QUAYE CUJOE JULIAN 8,406.28
    2164 BOAKYE ANSAH 8,405.60
    2165 ATAFO NSOBILA 8,403.44
    2166 AFUN JOHN 8,399.84
    2167 OPOKU FREDERICK 8,397.54
    2168 SHERIFA HUSSEIN 8,397.43
    2169 ADDO ESTHER 8,382.57
    2170 NTOW PATRICK AGYEI 8,367.45
    2171 NOYE EFUA SABINA 8,362.56
    2172 ESSEL ROBERT 8,349.60
    2173 MINTA ISAAC 8,349.46
    2174 KWASI ESSUN 8,345.93
    2175 NAAB JULIUS 8,344.78
    2176 RANSFORD AGYEKUM 8,341.11
    2177 M-M FARMS 8,337.58
    2178 ASSIBI BAYATIMBA 8,328.22
    2179 ALEX AFFUL 8,326.75
    2180 EUNICE GBATEY 8,324.09
    2181 HALLWORT GHANA ENTERPRISE LIMITED 8,306.74
    2182 TWUMASI THOMAS ANNAN 8,299.43
    2183 EMMANUEL OPPONG 8,294.75
    2184 MAINOO CHARLOTTE 8,292.63
    2185 AYESU HANNAH 8,290.04
    2186 SABI KWASI ROBERT 8,283.71
    2187 SARAH THOMPSON 8,277.48
    2188 YEBOAH OBIRI HANNAH 8,277.48
    2189 NICHOLAS APPIAH 8,277.48
    2190 DOTSE SAMUEL SEYRAM 8,277.48
    2191 DAVIDSON BARBARA 8,277.48
    2192 BARBARA NHYIRA DADZIE 8,277.48
    2193 NARTEY PATRICK 8,277.19
    2194 ENYONAM ASAFO AKOTO 8,274.53
    2195 SOVEREIGN OIL COMPANY LIMITED 8,271.36
    2196 SULLEYMANA ALIU YAKUBU 8,263.91
    2197 MABEL OPARE ADDO 8,263.08
    2198 ALANGRE AHMED 8,261.64
    2199 THOMAS AGBASU 8,249.01
    2200 DARKOH JANET 8,241.49
    2201 AMENUVOR MARY 8,241.49
    2202 ADAMS JERRY 8,223.50
    2203 GADO ALHASSAN 8,212.63
    2204 MENDS LINDA 8,205.50
    2205 AMOAKO A SABINA 8,205.50
    2206 RICHARD BOATENG MINTAH 8,196.68
    2207 DODOO FRIDERICK OTO 8,187.76
    2208 SAMADU NDEGO 8,187.51
    2209 SAM JOSEPH 8,178.55
    2210 NUTSA BEAUTY 8,169.51
    2211 AFRICA BEST ENTERPRISE (1184000000016) 8,165.70
    2212 OSEI- BONSU LINDA 8,159.44
    2213 JANET MENSAH 8,149.03
    2214 GLOBAL EYE TELECOM 8,143.92
    2215 KWAME OWUSU 2 8,127.84
    2216 OBENG ALHASSAN 8,126.33
    2217 ALADA JERRY SAM 8,126.33
    2218 SOLOMON ARKOH 8,123.16
    2219 AMUZU SAMUEL 8,115.53
    2220 GAIKPA ALEX 8,108.51
    2221 GUEST HOUSE JUNCTION EIGHT CO LTD 8,102.90
    2222 OSEI ADJEI NANA YAA 8,097.53
    2223 YAMOA KOBINA 8,097.53
    2224 OD0OM BENJAMIN 8,097.53
    2225 ABRAHAM BENZU GYAN 8,097.53
    2226 ADANE KWAME FRANK 8,091.31
    2227 EMMANUEL OTOO 8,090.77
    2228 MWINIBIMBO ENTERPRISE 8,081.05
    2229 KUATSIENU FRANCIS DANIELS 8,079.54
    2230 OGYIRI GYASI JEFF JUSTICE 8,079.25
    2231 DICKSON ADDAE ENTERPRISE 8,077.60
    2232 SULEMANA KOFI SABI 8,073.06
    2233 BOADI EMMANUEL 8,072.34
    2234 MOHAMMED BABA 8,066.01
    2235 ASAMOAH NANA ABENA 8,061.55
    2236 DODD BENYI KWEKU 8,037.32
    2237 K.SEM ENTERPRISE 8,036.86
    2238 CAMENS CONST. CO. LTD 8,034.48
    2239 AGYEI AMOANI MICHAEL 8,031.71
    2240 ADOBEA ESTHER 8,025.27
    2241 HAYFORD K ASANTE (1182000000337) 8,021.42
    2242 GUZUU ENTERPRISE 8,021.24
    2243 AMPONSAH FREDERICK 8,019.47
    2244 ADOTEY EMMANUEL SEGO 8,019.19
    2245 ASAMOAH MARTIN 7,997.52
    2246 NANKOGME WUMBEI 7,989.57
    2247 YAW ASAMOAH 7,989.17
    2248 KENNEDY ASARE (1185000000141) 7,987.08
    2249 ROCKSON GEORGINA 7,978.59
    2250 VERONICA DWOVOR 7,972.58
    2251 ASANTE PIOUS 7,964.34
    2252 ACHEAMPONG JAMES DANQUAH 7,957.07
    2253 ODURO EMMANUEL 7,953.58
    2254 JAMES GYEDU 7,946.38
    2255 MOHAMMED MAIDA FAIZA 7,940.95
    2256 WARE OPOKU CECILIA 7,925.51
    2257 ACHEAMPONG PETER KYEI 7,921.19
    2258 ISAAC FOSU 7,917.59
    2259 GADO ADAM 7,917.59
    2260 SAVING ARM ENTERPRISE 7,917.37
    2261 AFRIFAH PETER 7,890.49
    2262 SROMENDA CHRISTIAN 7,890.06
    2263 AMOATENG FREDERICK 7,872.60
    2264 PETER SOSU 7,870.80
    2265 HAMMOND MICHAEL 7,857.06
    2266 GLADYS ESSUMANG 7,856.98
    2267 EMMANUEL APPIAH 7,850.94
    2268 OWUSU ANSAH BONNAH KENNETH 7,845.61
    2269 SULEMANA YUSSIF 7,827.62
    2270 JOE BONDZIE ENTERPRISE 7,820.89
    2271 MORO HAWAH 7,813.76
    2272 QUARSHIE JORDAN 7,794.47
    2273 NAAWO JAMES 7,784.43
    2274 GEGEFE STEPHEN 7,784.43
    2275 KWESI AMISSAH 7,774.10
    2276 GYAN FRANCIS 7,773.63
    2277 ASAANA SULE 7,773.63
    2278 ABDUL AZIZ 7,773.63
    2279 REGINA ANKOMAH 7,762.84
    2280 ARTHUR HANNAH 7,752.04
    2281 RANSFORD PHONES 7,741.96
    2282 FIO ABENA BERNICE 7,736.06
    2283 ALHASSAN SHANI 7,729.83
    2284 KWAKYE SARFO BRIGHT 7,719.04
    2285 HARUNA HABIBA 7,705.47
    2286 ROSE N ALANDONG 7,701.65
    2287 NYANI KOFI ISAAC 7,692.01
    2288 TUMAWUH MODESTUS 7,683.66
    2289 FORSON FRANCISCA 7,682.72
    2290 BAIDOO BEATRICE 7,679.56
    2291 GYIMADO FRANCIS 7,677.61
    2292 AMOAH YAW 7,663.15
    2293 MENE MONICA 7,658.83
    2294 ANSU KWADWO MARTIN ANSU KWADWO 7,653.93
    2295 AWUAH BAFFOUR 7,647.67
    2296 AFUN FRANCIS 7,647.67
    2297 EMMANUEL BOADI 7,643.17
    2298 KYEREMAA RITA 7,633.28
    2299 MOHAMMED SAEBU 7,611.57
    2300 OBDARK VUNTURES 7,599.91
    2301 RICHARD KEN-ADOM 7,587.50
    2302 BENJAMIN YEBOAH 7,577.53
    2303 NII-BOYE ATSWEI BENEDICTA 7,575.69
    2304 ABEKAH BERNICE 7,573.57
    2305 AMADIZ ENTERPRISE 7,572.24
    2306 DOMINIC ANDOH 7,566.44
    2307 YAW MENSAH JUSTICE 7,557.70
    2308 OSMAN ALHASSAN 7,557.70
    2309 HUMPHERY JOSEPH TETTEH 7,557.70
    2310 NAMDAK LINKS ENTERPRISE 7,545.17
    2311 MAAMA ARHIN 7,540.14
    2312 THOMAS OBODAI 7,532.51
    2313 JAMES K GBORMITTAH 7,523.69
    2314 ASANTE AKWASI 7,521.71
    2315 SAI EMMANUEL 7,513.50
    2316 BEMPEH OSEI ALEX 7,503.72
    2317 TSEKPO JOHN 7,501.92
    2318 BOAKYE MENSAH 1041000001045 7,500.76
    2319 ANANI KOFI GAIKPA 7,494.07
    2320 OTOO MARGARET 7,491.48
    2321 SARFO SARAH 7,472.76
    2322 ASANTE KWASI DANIEL 7,462.44
    2323 LA-TOC COMPLEX (NO. 2) 7,452.57
    2324 KWANING FREDUA 7,448.90
    2325 OPPONG ELIZABETH 7,448.51
    2326 MERCY WILHELMINA AIDOO 7,437.75
    2327 FRANCIS KOFI WILSON 7,431.74
    2328 KONADU SELINA 7,419.61
    2329 JOSEPH ABAKAH MENSAH 7,413.74
    2330 MUMUNI ABDUL 7,413.74
    2331 ZAKARIA LATIF 7,410.47
    2332 OWUSU GLADYS 7,406.98
    2333 DAVID KWAKUYI OF ZENITH BANK 7,399.49
    2334 SEIDU ABASS 7,377.75
    2335 DUTY FREE LINKS 7,377.25
    2336 ARTHUR FRANCIS 7,366.06
    2337 BEDEMAC VENTURES 7,358.03
    2338 LIMAM MUSAH ENTERPRISE(SOLE PRO) 7,356.84
    2339 DJABA MICHAEL 7,348.96
    2340 ANNAN EMMANUEL KOJO 7,347.88
    2341 ATTUAHENE EMMANUEL(CUURENT 7,346.37
    2342 ASANTE OWUSU PATRICK 7,333.27
    2343 HARRIET OWUSU 7,324.92
    2344 NKRONUH MAJORIE 7,305.99
    2345 BOATENG AFRIYIE AKOSUA 7,305.78
    2346 ESSILFIE CHRISTINA 7,305.78
    2347 TRUST IN JESUS ENTERPRISE 7,304.66
    2348 VICTOR BOAFO 7,300.95
    2349 THAM MBIAH PROSPER 7,298.58
    2350 LARYEA GRACE 7,295.23
    2351 MENSAH FELICITY 7,284.58
    2352 JUSTICE KWESI ADJODA 7,281.81
    2353 GYAMFI OPOKU MICHAEL 7,276.41
    2354 GLORIA YIRENKYI 7,257.80
    2355 BAFFOUR FRANK 7,251.97
    2356 HOMIAH PAUL 7,251.79
    2357 ALHASSAN FUSEINA 7,236.35
    2358 EKUA ANSABA 7,233.94
    2359 SACKEY WILHEMINA AKOSUA 7,233.80
    2360 MOHAMMED SAWDATU 7,233.80
    2361 DWOMOH FRANK 7,233.80
    2362 ALHASSAN DAVID I 7,233.80
    2363 IDDRISU ADAM 7,222.96
    2364 GARGLO ALEX H. 7,217.35
    2365 IBRAHIM YUSSIF 7,215.30
    2366 ASIFIFI SARAH 7,213.75
    2367 FELIX ANTWI 7,205.15
    2368 ANNOO NII NORTEY BERNARD 7,198.96
    2369 TETTEH LOUIS 7,197.81
    2370 THERESAH EDUAKWAH 7,197.81
    2371 SAM EVELYN 7,197.81
    2372 VIDA AWUITOR 7,197.81
    2373 ZIBLIM FUSEINA 7,197.81
    2374 MERCY AGYEI 7,197.81
    2375 MENSAH KWABENA 7,197.81
    2376 KWOFIE BRANDFORD JOHN 7,197.81
    2377 IBRAHIM IDDRISU LOAN A/C 7,197.81
    2378 GABRIEL OTOO 7,197.81
    2379 COMFORT NIMO AGYEMANG 7,197.81
    2380 ANAANE AKUGBIRE 7,197.81
    2381 ALFRED PAINTSIL 7,197.81
    2382 AHUN FLORENCE B.E 7,197.81
    2383 ADDAH AZULERAH VICTOR 7,197.81
    2384 ANNAN GEORGE KING 7,197.81
    2385 0FORIWAA JANET 7,197.81
    2386 Abdallah Yahaya 1 7,197.81
    2387 ADOKPA ABU COFFSON 7,197.81
    2388 ATTA EMMANUEL 7,197.52
    2389 WETO JUDITH 7,190.61
    2390 OWUSU AUGUSTINE ANKOMAH 7,190.61
    2391 KORANKYE SAMUEL 7,167.29
    2392 MONICA A. WILSON 7,166.64
    2393 NKUM BENJAMIN 7,163.98
    2394 EMMANUEL LARBI KORANTENG (1185000000373) 7,161.82
    2395 IBRAHIM OPPONG KWARTENG 7,158.33
    2396 MENSAH FRANCIS 7,156.35
    2397 ARMAH JOHN 7,151.53
    2398 KUJO MARY 7,148.04
    2399 PEACE NKRUMAH 7,145.59
    2400 AYIKU MARGARET 7,143.82
    2401 ADAM C BASHIRU 7,140.41
    2402 PETER TAWIAH 7,125.83
    2403 EMMANUEL OSSEW 7,125.83
    2404 ERNESTINA OWIREDUA 7,125.83
    2405 DOMINIC ASANTE 7,124.75
    2406 ADETINDANA AWUNSINA 7,107.84
    2407 RUBINA AMARTEIFIO (1182000000016) 7,098.51
    2408 DAPAAH DORIS 7,092.29
    2409 OBENG ANSU AIKINS 7,089.84
    2410 DZIDE CATE 7,083.76
    2411 ENOCH KWAKU APPIAGYEI 7,079.04
    2412 SUNKWA YAA SANDRA 7,071.70
    2413 AKINTOLA ALEX 7,071.41
    2414 KAKU MATTHEW 7,069.94
    2415 DZORMEKU VICTORY 7,064.65
    2416 AGYEMAN DANIEL 7,053.85
    2417 MWINE ADAMS 7,043.99
    2418 EVANS D DANSO 7,023.62
    2419 AMPAH PHILOMINA 7,021.46
    2420 NYAMEKYE AWUDZI DANIEL 7,017.86
    2421 DZIKUNU GEORGE 7,017.86
    2422 ALIEYEFEE FRANCIS 7,014.26
    2423 NATILLY ENTERPRISE 7,010.13
    2424 BLESSING’S HEAVEN’S GATE TABER 6,999.58
    2425 ROSE DERY 6,997.85
    2426 OSMAN TORFIQUE 6,997.85
    2427 MUSAH AWINI ASUFU 6,997.85
    2428 ALFRED TWEEKU 6,993.07
    2429 ADAM SAMATA 6,987.99
    2430 KINGSLEY ADU POKU 6,985.47
    2431 AMPOFO SAMUEL 6,981.66
    2432 ADJEI KWAKU 6,978.49
    2433 FAITIN RICHARD DANSO 6,974.68
    2434 WILLIAM JNR A. OTOO (1185000000214) 6,972.84
    2435 NTOW HUGHES GRACE 6,968.56
    2436 ADZAGBO REJOICE AFI 6,967.48
    2437 APPAU KWASI 6,963.88
    2438 OPOKU NICHOLAS 6,943.83
    2439 BAAH KWAKU 6,942.29
    2440 PHRANKIES KENNEL AND PETSHOP 6,941.93
    2441 ABDULAI ABUKARI NASSAM 6,941.35
    2442 REGINA AMISSAH 6,925.84
    2443 PRINCE OPPONG YEBOAH ASUAMAH 6,920.87
    2444 SAKYI PHILIP KWAKU 6,920.44
    2445 AMEN VENTURES 6,916.27
    2446 NANTOGMAH ABDULAI YAKUBU 6,913.46
    2447 NUHU ASHEITU 6,909.90
    2448 SELBY SAARA LINDA 6,895.97
    2449 NANCY BANURA 6,888.30
    2450 OSEI KUSI MICHAEL 6,881.50
    2451 CEPHAS ARTHUR 6,880.56
    2452 OKPOTI SAMUEL SOWAH 6,873.62
    2453 OBENG MICHAEL 6,871.50
    2454 YAKUBU AMINATU 6,871.28
    2455 POBEE KWASI ASARE 6,845.12
    2456 FRANK OPOKU KODUA 6,841.52
    2457 HARRIET OWUSU- ACHEAMPONG 6,840.04
    2458 CHARLES AMOS-ODOOM (1185000000345) 6,837.92
    2459 GEORGINA OWUSU 6,837.05
    2460 FRIMPONG ELLEN 6,834.32
    2461 LAMPTEY KOFI DAVID 6,834.28
    2462 EBENEZER TETTEH 6,829.35
    2463 PENNY THOMAS 6,820.93
    2464 YUSSIF KALIBI 6,816.40
    2465 DZIWORNU PROSPER KING 6,815.42
    2466 OPOKU GLADSTONE EMMANUEL 6,812.73
    2467 ABDUL MALIK KORMORY 6,809.99
    2468 ADDAE PETER 6,797.90
    2469 DANSO DORIS 6,793.22
    2470 NGESSAH KAKU FRANCIS 6,776.95
    2471 IMORO AYI 6,765.94
    2472 BOAKOH FRANCIS 6,765.94
    2473 MOHAMMED ZARIATU 6,758.74
    2474 ANANE MICHEAL 6,758.60
    2475 ARTHUR JOSEPH KENNEDY 6,749.92
    2476 KWAKU OSEI EVANS 6,747.95
    2477 JOSEPH DONKOR 6,747.19
    2478 NYAVIE CATHERINE 6,746.61
    2479 AGYEMAN KWASI PREMPEH BENJAMIN 6,737.33
    2480 DANIEL YAW ADJABENG 6,732.83
    2481 ODEI-BIRIKORANG FREDERICK 6,729.88
    2482 DUATEY MICHAEL 6,723.36
    2483 BOSU KENNETH 6,717.86
    2484 ADOTEY WOGBE BENARD 6,710.26
    2485 DONARD EBO HARRISON 6,708.36
    2486 AMOAKO NYAMEKYE ISAAC 6,707.17
    2487 DOROTHY OPOKUA 6,697.56
    2488 JOSHUA ATTA MENSAH 6,696.66
    2489 SARATU KASSIM 6,693.96
    2490 ADVICE CLEARING SERVICES 6,690.40
    2491 ACKAH JOSEPH B. 6,688.53
    2492 BENSON ASARE ERNEST 6,683.16
    2493 KORSAA MERCY 6,675.43
    2494 YEBOAH VIDA 6,657.97
    2495 JULIE ARTHUR HUDSON (1185000000767) 6,657.97
    2496 ABAIDOO BETTY 6,657.97
    2497 RASHEED SAKO OMOTUNDE 6,655.63
    2498 ROSEMARY YIADOM A. 6,639.98
    2499 KOOMSON EMMANUEL 6,636.38
    2500 KORNI-BOADI STEPHEN 6,635.84
    2501 AGYIE CHRISTINA 6,632.78
    2502 EDZO RUTH 6,622.24
    2503 ANTWI BAAFI RONALD 6,618.82
    2504 AGRI SUPPLIES GHANA LIMITED 6,617.92
    2505 JOSEPH APPIAH 6,614.39
    2506 GAIKPA GEORGE 6,611.33
    2507 OPPONG PATRICK 6,609.78
    2508 STELLA OPPONG 6,597.94
    2509 GRACE ALI 6,597.94
    2510 DOKU EUGENIA 6,591.21
    2511 ELLEN AGYEIWAA 6,585.99
    2512 DAMBA AZARA 6,585.99
    2513 OBRON’S CORNER 6,584.34
    2514 BOAFO RICHARD 6,567.24
    2515 FRANK ASHUNG 6,564.40
    2516 KORANKYE KOFI 6,550.01
    2517 KULENU FAUSTAIN KOMLA GRAEVES 6,549.79
    2518 SAEED BIN MUSUD 6,542.81
    2519 SALOMEY NIMO 6,533.99
    2520 HAMDIYA ISSAH 6,532.01
    2521 CHARLES KOFI HAMMOND 6,523.09
    2522 KWEKU-MINAH ERIC 6,521.93
    2523 OFORI KWADWO 6,514.02
    2524 RICHARD KWESI AMONOO 0336 6,514.02
    2525 BEATRICE OBENG 6,514.02
    2526 OSEI FAUSTINA 6,496.02
    2527 SANA HARUNA ATIKA 6,496.02
    2528 YELBI ADAMA SUMAILA 6,495.05
    2529 COKE BOAKYE-MENSAH MAUD 6,485.23
    2530 EMMANUEL KWAME ANNAN 6,485.23
    2531 NYURE FERME FELIX 6,478.03
    2532 FRANCIS M.NKETSIAH (346) 6,478.03
    2533 ASARE KWADWO 6,478.03
    2534 AYEH ISAAC 6,478.03
    2535 YEBOAH ABOAGYE REBECCA 6,477.88
    2536 ADU GYAMFI KWAME EMMANUEL 6,477.81
    2537 PERPETUAL FYNN TENKORANG 6,477.09
    2538 ARHIN GRACE 6,476.59
    2539 NAOMI AGYEKUM 6,475.69
    2540 GRACE SAM 6,470.83
    2541 JANETTE YANGIN IMPERIO 6,470.58
    2542 BUKARI OSUMANU 6,462.98
    2543 IMORO ISSAKA ALHAJI 6,456.43
    2544 MAVIS APPENTENG 6,451.83
    2545 ESTHER AMANFO 6,437.68
    2546 ASIAW K.JOHN (1182000000218) 6,426.64
    2547 OSMAN ABDALLAH 6,420.16
    2548 DIADLIN COMPANY LTD. 6,417.78
    2549 YAKUBU SABIL BANYISIN 6,395.79
    2550 ZAKARI ADAM 6,393.53
    2551 LAWRENCE COBBLAH 6,392.73
    2552 MARTIN ASSAMPONG 6,388.05
    2553 OFOTSU HLORDJI JOHN 6,371.61
    2554 BANONGAA IBRAHIM 6,370.06
    2555 FYNN HAKEEM ABDUL 6,362.86
    2556 ARTHUR EMMANUEL 6,361.17
    2557 JACKSON KWAKU BOATENG 6,355.66
    2558 BOADU RICHARD 6,355.66
    2559 APAU ROBERT 6,352.64
    2560 MENSAH EBO EDWARD 6,351.85
    2561 ALTRAP CREDIT VENTURES 6,350.19
    2562 SAKINATU ADAMS 6,348.79
    2563 EPKE WOLA 6,346.09
    2564 TETTEH RUBY 6,344.51
    2565 RICE AND SUGAR VENTURES 6,339.11
    2566 JOHN ETSIBAH 6,335.47
    2567 MITSIAWO HOLALI 6,312.48
    2568 OWUSU FRANK KWAME 6,298.26
    2569 SAMPSON OPOKU KWAKU 6,298.08
    2570 NAA ANKRAH 6,298.08
    2571 JOYCE NSIAH ABABIO 6,298.08
    2572 LINUS BADUU 6,298.08
    2573 GYAN MOSES 6,298.08
    2574 DADZIE EKUA LINDA 6,298.08
    2575 AJIA ADIZA 6,298.08
    2576 KYEI FELIX 6,280.16
    2577 OWUSU JACKLYN 6,275.63
    2578 ACKON THOMAS 6,272.53
    2579 SAMUEL BOATENG 6,269.47
    2580 SAMEUL NYAMEKYE 6,268.07
    2581 OFORI ERIC 6,265.44
    2582 ISAAC APPIAH 6,262.45
    2583 MAHAMA AHMED 6,262.09
    2584 KOFI ESAAH 6,261.84
    2585 AWUDU HARUNA 6,255.29
    2586 RICHARD AFIAMOAH 6,249.50
    2587 MENSAH TEYE JONATHAN 6,247.70
    2588 BOAHIN JOYCE 6,247.70
    2589 BENKAE ISAAC 6,218.19
    2590 TAWIAH RICHARD 6,212.61
    2591 ANSONG KOFI SAMUEL 6,203.18
    2592 JOSEPH WORAE 6,200.91
    2593 MENSAH FLORENCE 6,190.12
    2594 ESSEL GLADYS 6,190.12
    2595 ANKAMAH ANITA 6,189.58
    2596 MOSE4S LARBIE 6,187.88
    2597 YEBOAH KUSI MICHEAL 6,186.91
    2598 ISAAC ASIRIFI 6,183.06
    2599 YAMOAH ROSE 6,177.52
    2600 MUNKAILA ALHASSAN KYEI 6,172.12
    2601 EMMANUEL ACKAAH 6,172.12
    2602 ANDREWS ROSE 6,168.52
    2603 APPOH MICHAEL 6,155.21
    2604 QUANSAH DANIEL 6,154.45
    2605 TREVE SIMON 6,153.98
    2606 GAISIE MARY 6,146.93
    2607 SONINA ENTERPRISE 6,144.59
    2608 SAVIOUR ADAMS 6,136.13
    2609 YUSIF HALIMATU 6,118.14
    2610 SOLOMON SANDOOBIL 6,118.14
    2611 MUSAH FATI 6,118.14
    2612 EFFAH AUGUSTINE 6,118.14
    2613 ASARE ALBERT 6,111.91
    2614 KUPALBA PIATATALBA 6,111.62
    2615 AIDOO ISAAC KOJO 6,097.16
    2616 FELIX OPPONG GYAMFI 6,089.56
    2617 GANIW YAKUBU 6,088.27
    2618 AKOSUA AGYEMAN 6,082.15
    2619 ASSIAM HENRIETTA 6,078.12
    2620 HELENA HASFORD 6,067.79
    2621 RAMATU BUKARI 6,064.15
    2622 YAYUONBEE ACHODOMO GROUP 6,060.55
    2623 ENNIN ANDY RAYMOND 6,057.93
    2624 JEMIMAH ARHINFUL 6,051.34
    2625 ABDUL RAZAK IBRAHIM 6,046.16
    2626 PEJECT GODFRED 6,046.01
    2627 ANKAMAH KWABENA JOSEPH 6,026.40
    2628 BAFFOUR-DIAWUOH JOSEPHINE 6,018.30
    2629 YEBOAH OFORI 6,017.58
    2630 KING BELLO NARURAL HEALTH SHOP 6,010.17
    2631 CYNTHIA OTOO 6,010.17
    2632 TAMAKLOE JOHN KOFI 5,998.22
    2633 JENNIFER ASARE 5,998.22
    2634 FATI MOHAMMED 5,998.19
    2635 DIANA KUDANU 5,998.19
    2636 ABDULLAH HAJIRA 5,998.19
    2637 OSEI-APPIAH MAXWELL 5,998.08
    2638 ASARE-QUAIDOO PATRICK 5,998.01
    2639 RICHARD ADOFO WEIDE 5,994.80
    2640 JAMES FRANCIS APPAU 5,993.33
    2641 DZANI SYLVANUS 5,992.18
    2642 KOBINA BANDOH 5,989.55
    2643 ASANTE SELINA 5,977.02
    2644 ADDISON EMMANUEL NANA BANYIN 5,976.81
    2645 SUMAILA IDDRISU 5,974.36
    2646 RICHARD TWUM 5,973.75
    2647 OTOO ABEEKU ANDREW 5,970.73
    2648 HENRY QUIST OF BOG 5,969.65
    2649 GAKAY WOODWORKS 5,964.86
    2650 ADDY JOSEPH 5,959.79
    2651 APAWU GRACE 5,952.19
    2652 ADU KWESI ISAAC 5,950.18
    2653 SALIFU MOHAMMED 5,938.19
    2654 JOYCE AFFUL 5,938.19
    2655 BENEDICTA AMPAH (1185000000190) 5,938.19
    2656 FRANCIS S ANAISIE 5,938.19
    2657 WIREKU KWASI EVANS 5,936.07
    2658 CN EMMY ELECTRICALS ENTERPRISE 5,931.32
    2659 SOVOR DAVID 5,920.20
    2660 ASANTE ADOFO JONATHAN 5,913.04
    2661 KWAME BONSU SMC14 7085 5,913.00
    2662 ANTIRAKWA KOFI BISMARK 5,910.66
    2663 ALHASSAN IMURAN 5,903.46
    2664 MPUSU GODFRED 5,903.17
    2665 OSABUTEY EMMANUEL 5,902.20
    2666 ZIBLIM ISSAH 5,902.20
    2667 BUKARI FATIMA 5,902.20
    2668 K-STILL TECH 5,884.21
    2669 FELICIA DODD 5,880.03
    2670 ASI KWAME FRANCIS 5,869.24
    2671 CONSTRUCTS RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT 5,868.88
    2672 ASIEDU KWAME 5,860.17
    2673 ELEN AWERE (1185000000195) 5,859.02
    2674 YAMOAH GYASI HENRY 5,856.14
    2675 TETTEH NII NOI RICHARD 5,855.38
    2676 FAUSTINA SARFO 5,848.22
    2677 EFUA WINFUL (1185000000661) 5,848.22
    2678 BAAH EDNA 5,846.24
    2679 APPIAH ERNEST 5,834.11
    2680 YANKSON LINDA 5,830.22
    2681 MUSA KARIM 5,830.22
    2682 MENSAH NYAMEKYE STEPHEN 5,830.22
    2683 IDRIS DORCAS 5,815.72
    2684 DAY BY DAY ELECTRONICS ENTERPRISE 5,813.78
    2685 OMAR MUSTAPHA 5,805.32
    2686 ABDULAI ABUKARI 5,797.83
    2687 IBRAHIM MUSAH ABUGA 5,796.11
    2688 AHINFUL SETH 5,794.24
    2689 ASSABIEH WILLIAM 5,779.84
    2690 KOFI KESSIE KING 5,777.50
    2691 DESMOND AKWASI BOATENG 5,773.94
    2692 GRACE AMOAKO 5,773.25
    2693 ENTSIE CLEMENT PRINCE 5,766.78
    2694 ROBERT K OWUSU 5,758.25
    2695 COLLINS BOAKYE 5,758.25
    2696 CHARLES KOFI OSEI 5,758.25
    2697 ABAIDOO MARY 5,758.25
    2698 REGINA DEDE 5,757.67
    2699 EUDORA BIMPONG 5,756.23
    2700 BOB AMPOFO 5,749.25
    2701 EBANYENLE JUSTICE 5,748.57
    2702 MARY AFUA ASANTEWA 5,743.85
    2703 ANSAH SENIOR OWUSU 5,740.79
    2704 ANGBANGNA KOBINA JAMES 5,731.61
    2705 ARMAH JANET DEEDEI 5,722.26
    2706 MICKENSCO VENTURES 5,709.99
    2707 YEBOAH GODFRED 5,704.08
    2708 AVORGBEDOR RICHARD 5,702.21
    2709 RAUDATU AWUDU 5,697.07
    2710 YAKUBU SULLEYMANA A. 5,697.03
    2711 AKOLOGO SALIFU KASIM 5,686.27
    2712 DANSO SAMUEL 5,684.76
    2713 CHARLOTTE MENSAH SARBAH 5,682.60
    2714 KOOMSON COMFORT 5,676.91
    2715 SALIO TIJANI 5,668.27
    2716 EXALT JESUS ENTERPRISE 5,654.06
    2717 ALHASSAN MARIAM 5,650.28
    2718 APPIAH WORAE EMMANUEL 5,639.48
    2719 OFORIWAA NELLY ALERT 5,638.30
    2720 FELIX ARMAH 5,632.28
    2721 ATITSO MICHAEL 5,632.28
    2722 BADIENA MICHAEL 5,627.61
    2723 TOWLI ISREAL 5,625.63
    2724 BAIDOO JOHN 5,624.48
    2725 OBUTEY K. ERIC 5,622.53
    2726 FRANK ASANTE (1182000000142) 5,614.51
    2727 TAHIRU ISSAKA AKILU 5,614.29
    2728 NANA AMA ABRAFI 5,614.29
    2729 ENOCK BOATENG 5,614.29
    2730 DOTSE SAVIOR 5,611.16
    2731 JOHN OBENG 5,606.44
    2732 ESSEL JAMES 5,598.06
    2733 FAUSTINA AMPONSAH AGYEMAN 5,596.30
    2734 DWAMENA AKENTEN MARTIN 5,564.12
    2735 IBRAHIM ALHASSAN 5,563.91
    2736 TAWIAH FELICIA 5,560.31
    2737 BASHIRU SALIFU 5,560.31
    2738 KOLAJO JOSHUA 5,560.27
    2739 KWABIA YAA LINDA 5,551.92
    2740 MATHEW AGYEKUM 5,549.87
    2741 PRAH MARIANNE 5,548.93
    2742 SAMUEL ARTHUR 5,544.44
    2743 AYERAKWA FAUSTINA 5,544.26
    2744 TCHAA NABIBILIWA 5,539.76
    2745 AYARIGA MARGARET TETTEH 5,536.45
    2746 ANNAN LOUISA ELIZABETH 5,533.78
    2747 YAHYA KUTUMAH 5,531.52
    2748 KWASI GODZA JOSHUA 5,524.32
    2749 YAWSON GEORGE 5,522.34
    2750 SAMUEL NUNOO 5,520.50
    2751 ANANE AUSTIN KWABENA 5,520.18
    2752 ERIC ANDOH 5,508.99
    2753 MUSAH MORO 5,499.31
    2754 DUAMBEYEN DANIEL 5,490.24
    2755 BENJAMIN K. NINSON 5,488.33
    2756 ALI SULEMANA 5,472.31
    2757 WOODE OBED 5,470.33
    2758 MOHAMMED LAMINU 5,470.33
    2759 ANKRAH NII ARYEE/PATRICK JONGENEELEN 5,463.28
    2760 FATI SEIDU 5,455.58
    2761 RAYMOND AWUAKYE 5,455.18
    2762 BEDIAKO FRED ADJEI 5,453.71
    2763 ARHIN STEPHEN 5,442.87
    2764 KWAME TAWIA 5,434.35
    2765 ESSIEN MICHAEL 5,428.51
    2766 LARBI CHRISTIAN 5,427.15
    2767 KYEI MENSAH ELSIE 5,420.74
    2768 NURDIVINE LIGHT BLOCK WORKS 5,416.82
    2769 AWAL YAKUBU 5,416.67
    2770 COFFIE ANITA 5,406.99
    2771 AWUDI KOMLAN 5,404.94
    2772 DEGADZOR FLORENCE 5,400.01
    2773 ODOOM GLADYS 5,398.36
    2774 OTUWA ADJOA 5,398.36
    2775 MARTIN TAMATEEB 5,398.36
    2776 HANNAH EBREHUN 5,398.36
    2777 FERGUSON EBENEZER 5,398.36
    2778 ASSIBI RUTH ANABAH 5,398.36
    2779 BEKOE VIDA 5,398.36
    2780 AMPONSAH STEPHEN 5,398.36
    2781 AMEKU FOSTER 5,398.36
    2782 ESTHER SIW 5,397.17
    2783 BARNINA TRADING ENTERPRISE 5,386.44
    2784 FOSU DANIEL 5,382.09
    2785 CHRIST BUSINESS ENTERPRISE 5,380.65
    2786 EFAH LYDIA 5,377.63
    2787 OFORI KWAKU SYLVESTER 5,374.60
    2788 OWUSU-SEKYEREH RICHMOND 5,373.16
    2789 TERRY KWAPONG 5,345.88
    2790 SAMBEKEY ENTERPRISE 5,344.37
    2791 MENSAH KOFI 5,344.37
    2792 APPIAH JENNIFER 5,333.58
    2793 GEORGE OPPONG 5,326.38
    2794 BEIDU MENSAH EVANS 5,322.78
    2795 KAGYISCO ENTERPRISE 5,321.56
    2796 REBECCA NYANZU 5,319.29
    2797 ADALETEY DAVID K 5,316.30
    2798 OPPONG KWAME SAMUEL 5,308.38
    2799 IDDRISU YAKUBU 5,304.64
    2800 AKYEREMADE TRADING AND BUSINESS ENT 5,292.44
    2801 SETH ATITO MENSAH 5,292.08
    2802 ADOR BENJAMIN 5,290.39
    2803 KENICHI TECHNOLOGIES LTD 5,283.70
    2804 AZANE SYLVESTER 5,281.86
    2805 RICHARD MENSAH 5,267.21
    2806 NYAWUDZI CHARLES 5,254.40
    2807 CONDUAH ERIC KOJO 5,254.40
    2808 SABIN NANA WILLIAM 5,250.23
    2809 ALHASSAN ALIMATU KANDE 5,248.39
    2810 ROSE OCRAN 5,247.20
    2811 AGYEI KWABENA 5,245.98
    2812 SUWEBA ADAM 5,242.31
    2813 BLESSED VENTURES LEXBEE 5,240.51
    2814 DOROTHY BINEY 5,234.43
    2815 SIMON KOFI MENSAH 5,232.81
    2816 APPAU AKWASI 5,232.81
    2817 EMMANUEL GYAMFI 5,230.04
    2818 DAVID NKUAH 5,228.27
    2819 MAMA KONADU ENTERPRISE 5,228.02
    2820 JEPAK ENTERPRISE 5,211.97
    2821 JOSEPH.TAKYI MENSAH 5,200.42
    2822 NANA AMISSAFI 5,198.55
    2823 ADDO PAUL 5,196.46
    2824 AMPONSAH GIFTY 5,189.62
    2825 JOHN ARHO 5,185.05
    2826 BABA MUSA (1185000001070) 5,182.42
    2827 ALEX AMOAH 5,182.42
    2828 DUODU NICHOLAS 5,173.86
    2829 NKRUMAH ESI 5,171.63
    2830 ROBERT MENSAH ZAKLI 5,168.60
    2831 EMELIA KONADU 5,165.51
    2832 MILLICENT SARFO 5,164.43
    2833 ABDULAI SALIFU 2 5,164.43
    2834 KWABENA POKU 1041000001731 5,164.14
    2835 PAINTSIL DANIEL 5,160.86
    2836 ABEKAH FRED 5,160.83
    2837 DANIEL K. BAIDOO 5,153.63
    2838 PERFECT CARE VENTURES 5,146.68
    2839 DALADI MORO 5,143.48
    2840 RICHARD WIAFE 5,140.31
    2841 RUTH OBENG POKU 5,132.61
    2842 GEORGE OPPONG DANQUAH 5,127.29
    2843 TERKPER DAVID TETTEY 5,125.81
    2844 KONAMAH CHARITY 5,123.47
    2845 BOYELA BISMARK 5,114.55
    2846 TWENE PETER 5,113.25
    2847 APPIAH MARK 5,110.66
    2848 DANIEL KOBINA 5,110.44
    2849 ACHEAMPONG RICHARD KWASI 5,108.07
    2850 DADSON FRANCIS 5,099.43
    2851 KARIKARI ALBERT 5,098.78
    2852 BEKOE AKOTO 5,097.81
    2853 AYEBIE-ACKAH JOHN 5,096.55
    2854 YAA OPOKUA SMC36 8011 5,092.45
    2855 NSIAH GIFTY 5,090.18
    2856 MICHEAL S. AZANU 5,088.78
    2857 AYIREBI KOJO 5,085.97
    2858 EDWARD AGYIRI 5,073.56
    2859 AFRIYIE AKUA 5,073.56
    2860 SAMUEL K. OPARE 5,071.97
    2861 COMMODORE MELEY CECILIA 5,071.00
    2862 ATUBGA MBAWINE 5,070.86
    2863 KARIKARI AGNES NARTEY 5,065.46
    2864 JESSE DANIEL 5,056.46
    2865 AMPONSAH N/A ELIZABETH 5,056.46
    2866 SEIDU IDDRISU 5,056.10
    2867 MARFO JONAS 5,053.11
    2868 KYEI THOMAS 5,048.29
    2869 ABDULAI ALHASSAN 5,041.56
    2870 ISSAHAKU ABDUL RAZAK 5,038.47
    2871 DZIFA KUBI YVONNE 5,038.47
    2872 QUARSHIE KWESI BENJAMIN 5,033.43
    2873 DENNIS DONKOR SMC16 8053 5,031.27
    2874 JAMBOYEB ENTERPRISE 5,029.94
    2875 OTI MENSAH BOUR 5,028.82
    2876 DANIELS ABENA AHWIRENGBEA ESTHER 5,025.87
    2877 ROSEMOND POKUA (ABENA POKUAA) SU – 5,022.88
    2878 ESSUMAN PRINCE JOSEPH 5,020.47
    2879 FRIMPONG ISAAC FRIMPONG ISAAC 5,020.47
    2880 ASSAN FANNY 5,016.87
    2881 SASU AGYAKWA SOLOMON 5,016.15
    2882 MENYIMSAAH PATRICK 5,016.01
    2883 MOHAMMED MUSAH LOAN A/C 5,013.27
    2884 CHRISTIANA OPPONG 5,002.48
    2885 ADZOROR PROSPER 4,986.79
    2886 JOB SULEMANA 4,986.71
    2887 KORANTENG ISAAC 4,976.28
    2888 OSEI KWAME ERIC 4,966.78
    2889 TSEYIBOR ANNIE 4,966.49
    2890 TUTU LUCY 4,959.72
    2891 GUNENU ROSE 4,959.29
    2892 RAYFORD KWAKYE 4,948.49
    2893 NYARKO PATRICK 4,948.49
    2894 GBOGBLORGBE GILBERT 4,948.49
    2895 DAPAAH AGNES 4,942.88
    2896 FOSU YAW 4,938.49
    2897 SEIDU HAMIDU 4,937.70
    2898 ALEX ASANTE 4,937.70
    2899 TANDOH KWAW FRANCIS 4,937.48
    2900 AFACHAW DESMOND 4,931.94
    2901 DARKO JONES KWAKU 4,930.50
    2902 ABONGO RICHMOND 4,930.50
    2903 GALENOR MATHEW 4,928.09
    2904 OPOKU BRIGHT 4,912.50
    2905 QUAINOO ANDZIE JOSEPH 4,912.50
    2906 KOKWA JACOB KWASI 4,912.50
    2907 JOSHUA MARTIN ATUAHENE 4,912.50
    2908 DOGBE COMFORT 4,912.50
    2909 DARKAH STEPHEN 4,897.14
    2910 BOSIAKO ANTWI KOJO 4,894.51
    2911 KODWO AWOTWE 4,883.71
    2912 GEORGE OBENG POKU 4,880.55
    2913 ABASS MALIK 4,876.52
    2914 GYAN GIFTY 4,870.65
  • 2915 HALLEM WAY VENTURES 4,869.07
    2916 BONSU AKWASI EMMANUEL 4,868.17
    2917 QUAISON JUSTICE OFORI 4,867.99
    2918 ESHUN ROBERT 4,866.91
    2919 OMANANO FELIX 4,863.02
    2920 AMO SAMUEL 4,858.52
    2921 APISAWU INNOCENT 4,858.52
    2922 BEATRICE ANKOMAH 4,858.52
    2923 AMOAH GIFTY 4,858.52
    2924 MANTEAW ESTHER 4,856.79
    2925 AGYAPONG KWABENA ALEX 4,854.24
    2926 KUAMPAH GIDEON KPATIKO 4,844.12
    2927 ANING PATRICK 4,843.66
    2928 ENGLISH SOPHIA 4,836.93
    2929 EMMANUEL K. AMISSAH 4,835.63
    2930 ASAMOAH-NKETIA CECILIA 4,833.87
    2931 OWUSU SEKYERE FRANCIS 4,829.19
    2932 MIESSAN AMA JOYCELINE 4,829.19
    2933 SAMPSON GEORGE 4,822.53
    2934 KWASI BOATENG 4,822.53
    2935 SARAH TETTEH QUARSHIE N. 4,820.59
    2936 LAR-TAN LIMITED 4,812.78
    2937 BORBOR AGNES 4,811.73
    2938 ANKRAH ELVIS TWUMASI 4,811.73
    2939 THOMAS ADE 4,811.05
    2940 FAUSTINA KISSIWAA SUSU 4,808.14
    2941 BOAKYE MICHAEL 4,799.86
    2942 LARBIE ALEXANDER 4,798.49
    2943 AMEDZOR PATIENCE 4,798.38
    2944 SAFIANU KARIM 4,796.15
    2945 AFUMANFO ENTERPRISE 4,795.50
    2946 MOHAMMED ABDUL LATHEEF 4,792.95
    2947 KWAKU OFORI-KWAPONG 4,786.54
    2948 CLEMENT ANAN 4,786.54
    2949 KUMI KWAKU KAKRA MICHAEL 4,786.07
    2950 PAUL BOAKYE-YIADOM 4,782.04
    2951 AZUMAH SIMON 4,780.86
    2952 AGGOR ANTHONY 4,768.55
    2953 KWABENA BOATENG 4,760.56
    2954 PATIENCE ANINAKWA APPAU 4,758.58
    2955 JANET AMANQUARNOR 4,754.30
    2956 ANAMAN CYNTHIA 4,750.55
    2957 MUSTAPHA IBRAHIM 4,747.64
    2958 GEORGE MELFAH 4,742.92
    2959 JOHANNES KWAMINA SCHECK 4,737.20
    2960 PADMORE-WOODE CHARLES K 4,719.21
    2961 THERESA AGANA 4,714.56
    2962 DUKER ADJOA 4,714.56
    2963 DOMINION HEALTH CARE LIMITED 4,710.79
    2964 ADMACKU LIMITED 4,695.45
    2965 NANA OSEI TUTU 4,691.24
    2966 TAWIAH COMFORT 4,678.58
    2967 SALIFU KASIM 4,678.58
    2968 JOHN KWANSAH-PAITTOO 4,678.58
    2969 KWAKU OPPONG (1185000000639) 4,678.58
    2970 AMOAH ADADE SEYH KWASI 4,678.58
    2971 ADAMU RUKAYA 4,673.11
    2972 OWUSU FELICIA 4,671.38
    2973 RICHARD OKYERE 4,670.87
    2974 ABBAN CHARLES 4,668.43
    2975 DANIEL EWIE OWU 4,660.18
    2976 SAMUEL GYAMFI 4,654.28
    2977 FRANK HAIZEL 4,649.96
    2978 SHANI ISSAH 4,649.78
    2979 AMOAH NICHOLAS 4,642.59
    2980 AMOAH STEPHEN 4,638.99
    2981 SARPONG ANDREW 4,638.12
    2982 ARKOH CHARLES 4,633.59
    2983 LYDIA NYARKO 4,633.19
    2984 ANTWI PRINCE KWABENA 4,631.79
    2985 ATTA KWASI 1045000004013 4,628.15
    2986 SALIFU A. SIITA 4,622.90
    2987 ZAKARI ALHAJI SALIFU 4,622.32
    2988 ADODODAJI ERNEST 4,621.35
    2989 BRENYA CHARLES 4,617.72
    2990 WOOD P. K. 4,617.39
    2991 MENSAH E. LAWRENCE 4,615.23
    2992 OSEI FRIMPONG ISAAC 4,606.60
    2993 ANTHONY ANOKYE 4,606.60
    2994 KONADU ESTHER 4,600.48
    2995 ISSIFU ADAM 4,594.00
    2996 AMANKWAA A. NATHAN 4,590.51
    2997 MENSAH ANIMLAH DAVID 4,588.96
    2998 OSAFO GODWIN MENSAH 4,581.40
    2999 BENEDICTA ASEYE USSHER 4,574.21
    3000 OWUSU ADU RICHMOND 4,570.61
    3001 ARMOH SAMUEL 4,570.18
    3002 RUTH OWUSU YEBOAH 4,563.41
    3003 AKUFFO ADU CHRISTIAN 4,561.97
    3004 DONKOR WINFRED AARON 4,548.30
    3005 AGYEI SAMUEL 4,545.42
    3006 TETTEH K JOHN 4,531.78
    3007 EMMANUEL AMOAH AKYIANO(LOAN A/C) 4,526.70
    3008 WILLIAM KORTEI CLOTTEY 4,522.85
    3009 ZAKARIA FUSEINI 4,513.57
    3010 MAVIS ABONIN 4,509.50
    3011 NARHWAYO SANDRA NORLEY 4,504.71
    3012 SANDRA AGYARE 4,499.75
    3013 BOADIWAA EUNICE 4,498.70
    3014 KHALID ABDUL KARIM 4,491.58
    3015 ABUGRI PETER 4,489.63
    3016 GIFTY ODOI 4,487.83
    3017 AGYEIWAA JANET 4,487.83
    3018 AMANKWAH VICTORIA 4,481.36
    3019 ACHIBRAH JOHNNY 4,480.56
    3020 PEACE EKPE 4,479.95
    3021 JOHN ASENTE ABROKWAA 4,478.84
    3022 BEATRICE DEBRAH 4,474.12
    3023 MARY DOGBATSE 4,471.28
    3024 HAKEEM HAWA 4,469.84
    3025 AUG-AL CONSTRUCTION LTD. 4,465.95
    3026 ABRAHAM COBBINAH 4,465.30
    3027 VICTORIA ADJEI 4,464.33
    3028 IDDRISU ZIBLIM 4,463.40
    3029 SIAW GEORGE 4,462.64
    3030 TAYLOR CECILIA 4,462.64
    3031 SULEMANA UMAR 4,462.64
    3032 SAMUEL ESHUN 4,460.01
    3033 GRACODAN ENTERPRICE 4,459.01
    3034 AFRIFA GRACE 4,456.81
    3035 DECORUM B& J LIMITED 4,447.78
    3036 AINOOH ELIZABETH 4,440.29
    3037 AMOAKOWAA GIFTY 4,432.45
    3038 AHUN EVELYN 4,427.55
    3039 HARRIET OWUSU – ACHEAMPONG 4,427.12
    3040 UNIQUE HEALTH FIRST FRONTIERS ENT 4,404.16
    3041 BANEST VENTURES LTD 4,399.70
    3042 TAMAKLOE CYRIL KWABLA 4,398.47
    3043 IDDRISU A RAHMAN LOAN A/C 4,395.70
    3044 JUSTICE AMEDZORNEKU 4,390.66
    3045 ANNAN EKOW ISAAC 4,376.56
    3046 AGYEMANG BADU 4,375.40
    3047 FREMPOMAAH ADWOA 4,373.53
    3048 OWUSU-SEKYERE KELVIN 4,371.62
    3049 IDDRISU NASHIRU 4,369.86
    3050 JAMES OPOKU 4,368.03
    3051 BABA NAFISAH 4,362.16
    3052 AFROKWA NTOW 4,354.67
    3053 AKWENSIVI CHARLES A. 4,350.10
    3054 MICHAEL KWADJO CHARLLOTE 4,347.76
    3055 AMADU TIJANE S ADAMU 4,347.15
    3056 YAH-DONNE ENTERPRISE 4,340.53
    3057 JOYCE DAPAAH 4,340.28
    3058 IBRAHIM JAABIR 4,335.13
    3059 MORO ISSIFU 4,334.95
    3060 ALHASSAN MEMUNA 4,331.78
    3061 QUAIDOO ANTHONY HONNARD 4,331.39
    3062 ABDUL YIDANA SALAM 4,329.48
    3063 JOHN HENRY WHYTE (571) 4,320.56
    3064 FATI ABDULAI 4,320.48
    3065 LAARI DAVID GODWIN 4,318.68
    3066 IDDRISU HUDU 4,318.68
    3067 JULIANA AMPONSAH 4,318.68
    3068 BOAKYE KWABENA SAMUEL 4,318.68
    3069 GHUNNEY MERCY 4,318.68
    3070 ERNEST AMPONSAH 4,318.68
    3071 COMFORT AFFUL(1182000000100) 4,318.68
    3072 IBRAHIM MUSA KOBINA 4,318.68
    3073 SEREBOUR AUGUSTINA OTUO 4,318.36
    3074 OWUSU PAULINA 4,318.15
    3075 NDEDE BENJAMIN 4,309.00
    3076 EMMANUEL BAISIE (1182000000046) 4,308.36
    3077 EVANS OFOSU 4,304.29
    3078 NYARKO BEATRICE ADWOA 4,296.59
    3079 JOSEPH AFRIFA OWUSU 4,290.47
    3080 IBRAHIM BUKARI 4,279.10
    3081 OBED K KYERE / MARGARET KUMI 4,274.27
    3082 LARTEY JONES DANSO 4,268.30
    3083 FIRST GATE RESOURCES COMPANY LIMITED 4,261.61
    3084 PATIENCE DOGBE 4,255.70
    3085 MENSAH ISAAC 4,254.16
    3086 ABDUL-LATIF ILLIASU 4,252.68
    3087 LONDON GIFTY 4,246.71
    3088 ADDAI CECILIA 4,246.71
    3089 KWEGYIR AGGREY MARGARET 4,239.51
    3090 BROWN T. JEREMIAH 4,239.51
    3091 ASEDA HARDWARE & TRADING ENT. 4,237.06
    3092 GERTRUDE AMPONSAH 4,235.91
    3093 ASANTE ISABELLA 4,235.37
    3094 ESTHER GYIMAH 4,233.64
    3095 SAMUEL AMANGA 4,210.72
    3096 MENSAH CHARLES K 4,210.72
    3097 BENEDICTA KUOFIE 4,210.72
    3098 ERIC ATO MENSAH 4,210.72
    3099 OKYERE MATTHEW 4,210.43
    3100 PETER PRINCE ESSEL 4,204.24
    3101 HASSAN MAHAD 4,198.70
    3102 S.K. DANSO VENTURES 4,196.21
    3103 FATI BUGRI 4,192.72
    3104 DANIEL AMOFA BAFFFOUR 4,192.72
    3105 AHIAMALE LUCAS 4,192.72
    3106 YABMAUD ENT.BOSSMAN K. YABE 4,187.29
    3107 AFIA CHRISTIE 4,174.73
    3108 AMEGBLETOR GEORGE 4,174.73
    3109 IDDRISU ISSIFU 4,172.79
    3110 ODUM EMMANUEL 4,171.38
    3111 DANSO GEORGE 4,170.59
    3112 JUSTINA ESSIEN 4,156.73
    3113 SIR SIGWARD ENTERPRISE 4,153.96
    3114 APPIAH OFOSU 4,150.22
    3115 OSEI KOFI 4,143.53
    3116 QUAINOO RITA 4,141.26
    3117 JOSEPH FIIFI ABRAHAM (1185000000363) 4,131.54
    3118 SASU ALICE 4,129.74
    3119 ALIEFEH KOJO 4,124.45
    3120 ADDAI FELICIA 4,120.75
    3121 LARBI EMMANUEL 4,120.46
    3122 A1 GOLDCITY COMPANY LIMITED 4,119.67
    3123 DONKOH FRANCIS CLAMAS 4,117.04
    3124 DAVIS TIMOTHY DAVIS TIMOTHY 4,116.03
    3125 OWUSU JACKSON NUAMAH 4,109.98
    3126 IDDRISU ABDULAI 4,109.95
    3127 MARY FORSON 4,106.64
    3128 AMO K OSMAN 4,105.38
    3129 ABA FATIMA 4,100.56
    3130 KOLEYEVU PATIENCE 4,099.69
    3131 KWAME MENKAH 4,099.15
    3132 ENYONAM ASAFO AKOTO 4,093.90
    3133 IBRAHIM ADAM 4,092.60
    3134 SUMAILA ISSAH 4,090.59
    3135 ABDUL RAHIM TCHAGNAO 4,085.48
    3136 KWESI B. KORSAH (1185000000254) 4,066.76
    3137 ANSONG LUCY 4,066.40
    3138 ACKAH ENYAKU BLAY 4,064.53
    3139 PAGE ONE COMPANY LTD 4,063.49
    3140 VERONICA EDAH 4,063.16
    3141 J K NKRUMAH GYAMFI 4,063.13
    3142 FLOODGATE QUICK SYSTEMS LTD 4,062.73
    3143 ODURO APPIAH JAMES 4,058.74
    3144 CHARLES MENSAH ENTERPRISE 4,057.01
    3145 KWAKU OWUSU EVANS 4,055.96
    3146 PUODONG IBRAHIM OSMAN 4,054.06
    3147 AMONOO REBECCA 4,045.17
    3148 KODOM ROCKSON 4,044.09
    3149 BAAH FRANCIS 4,037.57
    3150 IBRAHIM SALIFU 4,037.25
    3151 NAABAF ENTERPRISE 4,036.17
    3152 DARKOWAA RUTH 4,031.64
    3153 MOHAMMED AWAL MUSAH 4,030.77
    3154 GODWIN K. AGBOGLA 4,030.77
    3155 BABAKARMI ABDULATIF 4,030.77
    3156 ALHASSAN MUTAWAKIL 4,030.77
    3157 ALHASSAN SAHADATU 4,030.77
    3158 ALHASSAN MUBARAK 4,030.77
    3159 AGYAPONG JOSEPH 4,027.17
    3160 JOHN OBENG ACQUAH 4,026.96
    3161 KYEI GEORGINA 4,017.42
    3162 DOMINION CONCEPT LIMITED 4,017.42
    3163 AKAZUE SULE 4,013.86
    3164 NKRUMAH GRACE 4,012.78
    3165 FOSU SAMPSON KOFI EBENEZER 4,012.78
    3166 GEORGE YEBOAH 4,009.18
    3167 ELIZABETH OWUSU 4,008.82
    3168 AMOS OWUSU SMC27 3527 4,003.78
    3169 ATTUQUAYEFIO FREDERICK 3,997.84
    3170 BENJAMIN COBBINAH ACKAH 3,996.91
    3171 KWEBENA M. TENEBOAH 3,994.78
    3172 LUMOR-DEKU IRENE 3,992.37
    3173 DUAH ASIEDUWAH ROSE 3,985.71
    3174 BOAKYE PATRICK YIADOM 3,980.39
    3175 BENJAMIN OSEI KUMI 3,977.40
    3176 JOYCE AMPADU 3,977.26
    3177 KA ANTWI KWADWO 3,976.79
    3178 ABDUL HALIDU RAHMAN 3,975.42
    3179 SETH KOFI ADDO 3,965.99
    3180 ZAKARI ADAMU 3,962.75
    3181 BOATENG KWAME BISMARK 3,961.06
    3182 ADJESA LYDIA YOMLE 3,959.44
    3183 GODWIN ASIAMAH 3,958.79
    3184 ASAFO-ADJEI PRINCE 3,958.79
    3185 STEPHEN MENSAH 3,954.19
    3186 BOATENG DEBORA 3,954.01
    3187 A.M. DON- BOSCO ENT 3,951.78
    3188 RAMATU MUMUNI 3,951.60
    3189 ABDULAI SEIDU 3,950.41
    3190 DICKSON OSEI FRIMPONG 3,949.40
    3191 CHRISTOPHER APPIAH 3,946.56
    3192 AHORSU ESINAM JOYCELYN 3,941.16
    3193 NEGRO SAMPSON 3,940.80
    3194 ASAMOAH EMMANUEL 3,940.80
    3195 JEFF RANDY AMPAH 3,938.64
    3196 AKOLGO COMFORT 3,930.00
    3197 YEMOAH MARY 3,923.67
    3198 YAA SERWAA 3,922.81
    3199 MICHAEL ASEIDU (1185000000324) 3,922.81
    3200 KWAME NSOWAH 3,914.34
    3201 OWUSU REGINA 3,909.38
    3202 FOUZIA YAHAYA 3,904.38
    3203 DAVID S AKURUGU 3,898.94
    3204 CECILIA KESE 1045000002137 3,898.80
    3205 AKABUAH FLORENCE 3,898.69
    3206 ASARE FLORENCE 3,897.61
    3207 FATIMATA IBRAHIM 3,886.82
    3208 AIKIN VERONICA 3,883.22
    3209 NORTUS VENTURES LTD 3,877.14
    3210 EUNICE APPIAH 3,876.02
    3211 ASAH BADU SAMUEL 3,874.83
    3212 AKAMPUGA VIDA 3,863.78
    3213 ISSIFU THOMAS 3,853.63
    3214 KWESI OBENG 3,850.83
    3215 HAMIDU BUKARI ALHASSAN 3,850.83
    3216 HAMIDU BABA 3,850.54
    3217 ZOOSHIRI CONTRACT 3,848.20
    3218 KWAYIE BIRIKORANG 3,842.30
    3219 ANIM STEPHEN 3,832.83
    3220 GLO MULTI CO. LTD 3,831.54
    3221 MOHAMMED RAKIBU 3,831.14
    3222 RABIU SEIDU WUMPINI 3,829.23
    3223 KOFANSAH VENTURES 3,823.87
    3224 YEBOAH COMFORT 3,815.52
    3225 HUSSEIN ALHASSAN 3,811.78
    3226 EVERYTHING MULTIMEDIA CO.LTD 3,795.55
    3227 ROSE AGYEIWAA APPIAH 3,791.34
    3228 SHITU ABDULAI 3,785.54
    3229 MAWUENYEGA GODSWAY 3,778.85
    3230 MAHAMUD AFANDI 3,778.85
    3231 ADU KWASI 3,778.85
    3232 PRINCE ADJEI HAYFORD 3,776.19
    3233 BAAH KWESI JAMES 3,775.21
    3234 OWUSU- ANSAH JOHN 3,766.69
    3235 EVELYN MENSAH 3,759.96
    3236 AGBEKO WISDOM 3,759.42
    3237 ISAAC OWUSU 3,759.27
    3238 ANTHONY AKWASI ADJEI 3,757.26
    3239 ATTAKPAH TAY WANZY 3,757.18
    3240 OPOKU KWAME 3,742.86
    3241 MOHAMMED A. SALIFU 3,742.86
    3242 ESTHER PUPLAMPU 3,742.61
    3243 SAYAWU MOHAMMED MUSTAPHA 3,741.78
    3244 YUSSIF SHERIFDEEN TOBO 3,741.64
    3245 AZAMETI JENNIFER ESINANA 3,741.31
    3246 IBRAHIM OSMAN 3,728.61
    3247 ISSAHAKU UMAR 3,724.87
    3248 KOFIKROM TRADERS ASSOCIATION 3,724.87
    3249 CHAELART ENTERPRISE 3,724.51
    3250 AWATEY TEYE ALBERT (1182000000059) 3,721.81
    3251 HABIBA SALAM 3,717.67
    3252 DONKOH KWESI FRANCIS 3,714.07
    3253 AMEYAW JOSEPHINE 3,714.07
    3254 ADZEVIA VICENTIA 3,714.07
    3255 SEIBU FELIX 3,706.87
    3256 ARMIYAW HABIBA SANI 3,706.87
    3257 ANTHONY ESHUN 3,698.02
    3258 BENYAH GODWIN 3,696.11
    3259 OSABUTEY WILLIAM 3,696.07
    3260 ESHUN JOHN K. 3,694.02
    3261 K.GEE SPARE PARTS 3,693.95
    3262 DOGBEY DANIEL 3,692.48
    3263 BEATRICE MENSAH 3,690.10
    3264 ABDUL RAHMAN 3,689.96
    3265 NANA TAKYI 3,688.88
    3266 COLEMAN SOLOMON 3,687.15
    3267 ADU JOHNSON 3,686.11
    3268 OKYEREFOR SANTUS 3,678.08
    3269 ADAMS GIFTY 3,672.68
    3270 AMINA ADU 3,672.25
    3271 GYEKYE JONAS KOFI 3,670.88
    3272 BINEY KWADWO EMMANUEL 3,666.24
    3273 FELICIA OSEI MENSAH 3,656.31
    3274 MENSAH JOHN 3,652.89
    3275 TAMAKLOE KOFI LEO 3,651.59
    3276 ASANTE SAMUEL 3,649.29
    3277 KWADE .A. MARTIN 3,646.09
    3278 NARTEY ISAAC 3,645.83
    3279 MUTAWAKILU MUMUNI 3,645.69
    3280 BENEWAA MARGARET 3,644.03
    3281 AMPAH GIFTY 3,638.13
    3282 KONADU CHRISTIANA ADDAI 3,636.19
    3283 IDDRISU ABUBAKARI 3,634.89
    3284 DODOO PATRICK 3,634.89
    3285 GARIBA ABDUL RAZAK 3,634.89
    3286 SHEI AZARA 3,634.75
    3287 OKYERE ANTWIAA IRENE 3,634.17
    3288 YUNRAMS COMPANY LIMITED 3,626.26
    3289 ALHASSAN IBRAHIM 3,624.71
    3290 MARY DANKWAH 3,624.10
    3291 ESSUMAN ISAAC 3,619.85
    3292 WIN INVESTMENT LIMITED 3,616.14
    3293 ROMEZ ENTERPRISE 3,608.15
    3294 GIFTY BOTCHWEY 3,607.90
    3295 BERNICE DAVOR 3,605.71
    3296 MUSAH HUMU 3,605.31
    3297 BOAHEN CONSTRUCTION WORKS LIMITED 3,604.77
    3298 MENSAH IRENE 3,599.08
    3299 MENSAH MOSES 3,599.05
    3300 COMFORT AGYEIWAAH 3,598.94
    3301 SIMPSON KOFI EBENEZER 3,598.90
    3302 SEKYI ADU SAMUEL 3,598.90
    3303 WUMBEIDOO YUSSIF 3,598.90
    3304 TAYLOR MARY 3,598.90
    3305 PATRICT MENSAH 3,598.90
    3306 QUAINOO ANDZI ROSENA 3,598.90
    3307 KUMAH ERIC 3,598.90
    3308 JERRY DELASE TUABU 3,598.90
    3309 MENSAH WINIFRED 3,598.90
    3310 MARY NINSIN 3,598.90
    3311 ISAAC K ESHUN 3,598.90
    3312 ISSIFU YAKUBU 3,598.90
    3313 MUSTAPHA SAFIANU 3,598.90
    3314 NKRUMAH THERESA 3,598.90
    3315 FUSEINI DAWUDA 3,598.90
    3316 DJAN JUSTICE 3,598.90
    3317 ARTHUR ISAAC 3,598.90
    3318 AGYENIM BOATENG 3,598.90
    3319 ABUKARI MARIAMA 3,598.90
    3320 AWUDU MOHAMMED 3,598.90
    3321 AWOTWE ARABA 3,598.90
    3322 ANSABA KWAME 3,598.90
    3323 AMA FOSUA 1045000000060 3,598.90
    3324 ADU-POKU PAUL 3,598.90
    3325 AZUMI ABDALLAH 3,598.54
    3326 ISSAH MUSAH 3,598.08
    3327 FOUZIA TUFAILU 3,595.45
    3328 SEGBEDZI CHARITY 3,595.31
    3329 BUAH EKOW ROBERT 3,595.31
    3330 AWUDU YIRIMEA AWULATU AWUDU YI 3,594.59
    3331 YAKUBU MOHAMMED 3,594.12
    3332 SAEED KOLIBOGU 3,591.71
    3333 BINEY AGNES 3,580.91
    3334 ASANTE PETER SETH 3,579.51
    3335 DJAN KENNEDY 3,572.81
    3336 NYARKO LUCY 3,566.77
    3337 BADU KOBINA 3,563.20
    3338 BILLINGNANI ELIJAH 3,559.39
    3339 AMUQUANDOH G.K. PHILIP 3,552.12
    3340 DAVIS HAIR STUDIO 3,551.90
    3341 ABOYER FREDERICK 3,546.40
    3342 DUVOR REJOICE 3,530.52
    3343 HEMADE PEACE 3,526.93
    3344 YUSSIF KABIRU 3,526.71
    3345 EDZE PATRICIA 3,524.66
    3346 ABOAGYE KWADWO 3,524.62
    3347 APPOH KWAME DESTIN 3,523.83
    3348 EFFA-ASARE NEWMAN 3,523.15
    3349 ODIASEMPA AMOAKO TUFFOUR 3,522.46
    3350 ASIEDU AFUA ANSAA 3,521.06
    3351 PWAZAGAH REAGAN 3,517.35
    3352 OWUSU JAMES 3,512.39
    3353 DANIEL SARFO 3,508.93
    3354 AYISHATU SEIDU 3,503.89
    3355 THOMAS KUUBEWOLE 3,501.73
    3356 SADIA IBRAHIM 3,499.79
    3357 SUZEL ENTERPRISE 3,499.61
    3358 TAKYIWAA FELICIA 3,497.27
    3359 KOFI OWUSU 3,490.97
    3360 ALICE KONADU 3,490.94
    3361 IBRAHIM ALI 3,487.70
    3362 ENOUGH GRACE &MERCY ENTERPRISE 3,487.12
    3363 IBRAHIM OSUMANU ZUBAH 3,483.74
    3364 UMAR ABUBAKARI 3,479.31
    3365 SAMUEL KWESI MENSAH 3,475.21
    3366 BARIKISU BALA 3,473.91
    3367 SAMUEL OKYERE SAMUEL OKYERE 3,472.94
    3368 ARKO MICHAEL 3,472.94
    3369 ADAM JALIL ABDUL 3,472.73
    3370 PHILLIP A.FRIMPONG 3,472.55
    3371 JOHN L.K OKRAH 3,472.55
    3372 AYESHETU MOHAMMED 3,472.55
    3373 JOHN ANANE 3,472.19
    3374 YAYAH ALHASSAN 3,469.34
    3375 ELIZABETH ESI ESHUN 3,468.19
    3376 ASARE BEATRICE 3,467.98
    3377 ANYANOR AUGUSTINE 3,464.59
    3378 KWAME FREMPONG 3,463.95
    3379 AWABU SALISU 3,461.93
    3380 ABOAGYE KWAME RICHARD 3,458.44
    3381 OWUSU KWABENA DANIEL 3,454.95
    3382 JUHN WILSON AMPIAH 3,454.95
    3383 LINDA MEDDLEY 3,454.95
    3384 FRANCIS ABRENKWAH 3,454.95
    3385 FOSU FRANCIS 3,454.95
    3386 ELIZABETH FONOU 3,454.95
    3387 BRIMAH MUYINATU 3,454.95
    3388 ELIZABETH ANIA 3,454.95
    3389 KOBINA JAMES 3,453.90
    3390 YAKOBA GRACE YARTEY 3,453.62
    3391 TAHIRU JAMAL 3,452.79
    3392 ZNIMIH COMPANY LIMITED 3,452.14
    3393 BOAKYE YEBOAH CONSTRUCTION LIMITED 3,447.03
    3394 FRANCISCA OSEI TUTU 3,440.77
    3395 OPPONG EVELYN 3,419.46
    3396 JOYCE ATTA 3,418.96
    3397 NYANTAKYI SOLOMON 3,418.96
    3398 JOHN MENSAH 3,418.96
    3399 ENTSIE AFUA 3,418.96
    3400 ACQUAH H STEPHEN 3,418.96
    3401 AB-ZANAB ENTERPRISE 3,418.96
    3402 KWAME KARIKARI 3,417.77
    3403 FORSON MARY 3,415.36
    3404 SAMUEL OSEI TUTU MF 3,411.62
    3405 HOWARD NYARKOA JOANA ABENA 3,410.11
    3406 IDDRISU A. RAHMAN 3,406.72
    3407 FIAGBENU ELORM KWASI GOODNAME 3,406.43
    3408 SULEMANA SHAHADU 3,406.36
    3409 DARKU EMMANUEL 3,404.56
    3410 OWUSU KWAKU MANU DERRICK 3,403.09
    3411 SACKEY KOFI JOHN 3,402.33
    3412 NIGHT STAR VENTURES 3,401.90
    3413 AMA AKYIAA 3,400.96
    3414 AMENYA VICTORIA 3,400.96
    3415 GABRIEL ADOMAKO AKWASI 3,400.60
    3416 ADABO EBENEZER 3,399.67
    3417 Mohammed Ruhaima 3,396.47
    3418 SEIDU SALILU KABORE 3,393.77
    3419 AGYEMANG PRINCE KOFI 3,393.77
    3420 NKYI AKWESI KENDY 3,392.40
    3421 MARY MANTEY 3,388.55
    3422 ABUBAKARI ALHASSAN 3,385.13
    3423 BIAMA KISSI PATRICIA 3,382.68
    3424 ARHIN GABRIEL 3,379.01
    3425 MARY ANNA EKU 3,375.23
    3426 SEY EMMA 3,373.97
    3427 GEORGINA OPOKU 1041000000992 3,373.97
    3428 KWEKU SAMUEL 3,372.17
    3429 CRABBE MARY 3,372.17
    3430 FREDRICK TETTEH 3,371.63
    3431 TITUS IBRAHIM NUHU 3,370.73
    3432 JULIET BAIDOO 3,369.87
    3433 MOHAMMED K BADAR 3,368.57
    3434 ANTWI ALEX 3,366.77
    3435 PETER YAW ASARE (1185000000887) 3,364.98
    3436 NYARKOH MARK J. 3,364.98
    3437 ALEX K. ADJEI 3,364.98
    3438 GURODOW MASHUDU 3,364.83
    3439 PRISCILLA ADUBOFFOUR 3,359.00
    3440 DAHAWUDU MOORO 3,351.26
    3441 ZAKARIA HUMUL-KUSUM 3,350.58
    3442 TAHIDU AL-HASSAN 3,350.58
    3443 SEIDU YAKUBU 3,350.58
    3444 IMORO SUMED 3,350.58
    3445 ALABAANI MOHAMMED 3,350.58
    3446 ZINABU YUSSIF 3,349.72
    3447 ACKOM SAMUEL 3,346.98
    3448 FAITH STRUCTURES LIMITED 3,343.56
    3449 YANKEY MAUREEN 3,343.38
    3450 NYARKOH PHILOMINA 3,343.38
    3451 ESI SAM 3,336.18
    3452 ALHASSAN ABDUL FATAWAU 3,333.48
    3453 BONDZIE KENNEDY 3,332.69
    3454 LYDIA ADOBIAH 3,332.59
    3455 LAWER SIMON 3,330.07
    3456 ROSEMARY POMAAH 3,328.99
    3457 JOHN OPPONG 3,328.99
    3458 NYARKOH LYDIA 3,328.37
    3459 IBRAHIM ADISA 3,325.39
    3460 NANA KWAME OWUSU ANSAH 3,323.48
    3461 ISSAH HAMIDA 3,321.03
    3462 ABURIKA CYNTHIA 3,320.06
    3463 MILLICENT ADJEI 3,318.55
    3464 ODENSEL QUAINOO JOHN 3,314.91
    3465 MICHEAL A. AGYEKUM 3,310.99
    3466 KARIKARI MAVIS 3,310.99
    3467 GYAU HANNA 3,303.79
    3468 KWAMINA ABEDNEGO 3,302.82
    3469 LYALL BRIGHT 3,300.91
    3470 ISAAC DANSO (1185000000428) 3,300.20
    3471 ASARE ADU ANGELA 3,300.05
    3472 LAILATU ABDUL KARIM 3,298.43
    3473 BENJAMIN KOJO ABOAGYE 3,297.17
    3474 GARIBA DEVELOPMENT ASSOCIATES 3,296.16
    3475 ARTHUR HAGAR 3,293.00
    3476 MANU FELICIA 3,292.78
    3477 ATSYRO BOTCHWAY FELICIA 3,286.48
    3478 OWUSU AKWASI AFRIFA-MENSA 3,286.09
    3479 ADAM HUDU DOBINO 3,285.80
    3480 DANIEL OPOKU 3,284.36
    3481 KONADU ERIC 3,283.53
    3482 YAAH FOSUAH 3,282.20
    3483 BABBILAA VENTURES3 3,280.65
    3484 RICHARD LAWOE 3,280.40
    3485 KWEKU HAGAN 3,280.04
    3486 BOATENG EBENEZER 3,278.67
    3487 ABDULAI ANATU 3,272.77
    3488 NKANSAH NOAH 3,271.84
    3489 ABUKARI RUKAYA 3,264.06
    3490 FORSON BEN 3,263.49
    3491 FASTPHARM CO. LTD(GODWIN KOFI DECKLE) 3,262.30
    3492 ALFRED YAW FIKWAO 3,260.61
    3493 MENSAH KENNETH 3,257.01
    3494 AFUA ADUTWUMWA (EBENEZER) 3,257.01
    3495 AGYA YAW FREMPONG MANSO 3,254.42
    3496 ISAAC NTREH 3,254.17
    3497 NTIAMOAH CHARLES 3,253.41
    3498 JWT ENTERPRISE 3,250.89
    3499 AHIANYO SOLOMON KING 3,248.80
    3500 SHANI YAKUBU 3,245.13
    3501 MERCY PUPLUMPU 3,242.61
    3502 ERIC APPIAH 3,241.03
    3503 ATTIGAH MARY 3,240.60
    3504 FATI ZAKARIA 3,239.05
    3505 ISAAC AWUAKYE 3,237.50
    3506 JOHNSON AGYARKO 3,236.85
    3507 OMARI ELLEN 3,235.59
    3508 APPIAH ANTHONY 3,235.41
    3509 ANNAN SAMUEL 3,233.29
    3510 HOLY TRINITY RECTORATE 3,232.14
    3511 RICHARD A. FRIMPONG 3,226.81
    3512 PAUL OWUSU 3,224.47
    3513 FRANCIS KUMI 3,224.47
    3514 AWAL ADAM 3,222.78
    3515 SALOMEY GYAMAA 3,221.02
    3516 STEPHEN ABOR 3,218.75
    3517 LALIR BILIJO 3,210.44
    3518 FATI MAMA 3,210.01
    3519 KWABENA ARMAH 3,209.18
    3520 DANIEL KINGFULL ARTHUR 3,207.49
    3521 OSCAR TAWIA DERICK 3,203.02
    3522 AYAABA FRANCIS 3,203.02
    3523 AGARTHA ADONBILA 3,203.02
    3524 REBECCA LOVI 3,198.99
    3525 VOEDIANYI ESI LOVELOCK 3,197.66
    3526 JAMES KWASI ARTHUR 3,194.96
    3527 MASH CHEMICALS 3,190.75
    3528 ROBERT ODARTEY ANNAN 3,188.63
    3529 SALOMEY OTIWAA 3,185.03
    3530 JANET ADDY 3,182.04
    3531 EMMANUEL OPOKU OWUSU 3,175.13
    3532 ADARKWAH MAC WILLIAM 3,171.64
    3533 NAABSIGNA A. GLADYS 3,167.94
    3534 FRIMPOMAA ABENA 3,167.04
    3535 APPIAH STELLA 3,167.04
    3536 ADAMS MARY 3,167.04
    3537 KORANTENG FRANK 3,166.82
    3538 ACQUAH ROBERT 3,160.56
    3539 ANTWIWAA AFIA 3,156.24
    3540 YEBOAH ANTHONY 3,155.77
    3541 YEKETEBA ROSELINE 3,152.03
    3542 AKAHO TAY MARTIN 3,149.22
    3543 INUSAH SARATU 3,148.25
    3544 AKESE KINGSLEY 3,146.81
    3545 AGYAPONG AFRA CECILIA 3,146.09
    3546 PREMPEH NANA KWAME PRINCE 3,139.94
    3547 FLORENCE ASANTEWAA 3,139.04
    3548 FARUZA ABDUL RAUF 3,138.24
    3549 AWINI AZIZ WILLIAMS 3,138.03
    3550 KWAKU DUAH 3,135.37
    3551 JOSIAH SCOTT-ASMAH (1182000000344) 3,132.31
    3552 MOHAMMED NASSAM 3,131.05
    3553 FYNN THERESA 3,131.05
    3554 AMPONSAH GEORGINA 3,131.05
    3555 AGYEMANG MARGARET 3,131.05
    3556 MWINTOGEE SYLVESTER 3,128.31
    3557 DANSO BRIGHT 3,123.85
    3558 GYEDU PAULINA 3,113.05
    3559 ABAJWONG JANET 3,113.05
    3560 ACHINIA TIKA MOSES 3,112.76
    3561 SAMUEL HAGAN 3,112.66
    3562 OSEI JOHN 3,109.45
    3563 JONATHAN O. LAMPTEY 3,108.37
    3564 NAAYANG OTOO FLORENCE 3,104.49
    3565 ALHASSAN ADAM 3,104.27
    3566 AGYEKUM GEORGE 3,098.66
    3567 ASSOGI AMA ELIZABETH 3,098.66
    3568 NAKOJA ROSE 3,098.22
    3569 YABOYE FELIX 3,097.36
    3570 THOMAS KWAW 3,095.06
    3571 MICHAEL AMOH 3,095.06
    3572 MAHAMUD SULEMANA 3,095.06
    3573 ABROKWAH FRANK 3,095.06
    3574 OBRA YE BONA VENTURES 3,094.63
    3575 ADERKO VIVA 3,094.37
    3576 WENDY ASANTE 3,092.57
    3577 PRIME HABONA VENTURES 3,092.47
    3578 MULTISCAN FINANCIAL INVESTMENTS LIMITED 3,083.36
    3579 ABARIKA FATI 3,080.66
    3580 AGYEMANG ANDREWS 3,077.06
    3581 MANU VIDA 3,076.85
    3582 ZINZTU OSMANU 3,075.91
    3583 ACHEAMPONG ESTHER 3,074.18
    3584 BOATENG ASARE SAMUEL 3,071.52
    3585 AGYEI GEORGE 3,068.97
    3586 ODEI SAMUEL 3,067.96
    3587 ASHA ALHASSAN (1185000000527) 3,066.27
    3588 NANOR CYNTHIA 3,065.19
    3589 LINDA AJOA AMOAFOA 3,063.60
    3590 MICHEAL S. AZANU/ S ADIAM 3,062.52
    3591 ABDUL-SALAM MUSTAPHA 3,059.07
    3592 ASANTE K. GRACIOUS 3,058.85
    3593 PETER COBBINA DONKOR 3,058.56
    3594 NADIS MULTI PURPOSE CO LTD 3,054.57
    3595 GODWIN AMPONSAH 3,053.49
    3596 SADAL ENTERPRISE 3,049.93
    3597 AWUMEY RICHARD 3,044.67
    3598 MOHAMMED SAHARA 3,044.28
    3599 EMMANUEL KYEREMATENG 3,041.07
    3600 ALHAJI YAHAYA ABDULLAH 3,041.07
    3601 JOYCE AMANKWAA 3,038.45
    3602 SABRATU MOHAMMED 3,033.16
    3603 GIDI VICTORIA 3,027.07
    3604 TORGBOR OBOSHIE SYNTYCHE 3,026.35
    3605 GHUNNEY KOFI ISAAC 3,025.20
    3606 CHARLESTINA MENSAH 3,024.34
  • 3607 BOATENG AYISI CHARLES 3,023.08
    3608 ASIAW GRACE 3,021.64
    3609 KOBINA YAMOA 3,014.01
    3610 SALIFU MARIAMA 3,008.47
    3611 WILLIAM ANTWI 3,008.11
    3612 MUSAH HALIDU 3,004.19
    3613 NAFISAH IBRAHIM 3,001.49
    3614 ABENAA BOATEMAA 3,001.49
    3615 FLORENCE BENTIL (1185000000458) 2,999.11
    3616 GRANT VIDA 2,999.07
    3617 BEMAALIA VICTORIA 2,999.04
    3618 AGYESI-ESSIFUL EMMANUEL 2,994.29
    3619 YUSSIF MOHAMMED1 2,987.09
    3620 NYAMEKYE DORCAS 2,987.09
    3621 NAFISATU ALHASSAN 2,987.09
    3622 ABUKARI IMORO 2,987.09
    3623 NYATUSAH INOCENTIA 2,985.51
    3624 JOSEPH AWOTWE 2,981.30
    3625 Issah Salifu 2,980.65
    3626 ADAM AMINA 2,972.15
    3627 BENTIL AGNES 2,969.10
    3628 BASHIRU RAFAH 2,962.69
    3629 BOAKYE KWADWO PRINCE 2,961.90
    3630 AKORSA A ERNEST 2,961.61
    3631 PHILIP AZIAKLO 2,955.96
    3632 HUSSEIN ABDUL-RAZAK 2,950.96
    3633 FULERA IBRAHIM 2,949.66
    3634 BENTIL ERNEST 2,944.95
    3635 TONTO KWABENA 2,943.90
    3636 ADOMAKO PATRICK 2,942.10
    3637 OSDA ENTERPRISE 2,941.71
    3638 DANIEL NYAMKYE 2,940.30
    3639 YAA ACHIAAA SMC22 2,940.12
    3640 INUSAH SUALIHU 2,939.12
    3641 MAXWELL AGYAPONG (1185000000185) 2,933.11
    3642 ADOMA RITA 2,933.11
    3643 DAVAMS ENGINEERING LIMITED 2,932.03
    3644 KWASI NANA APPEATU 2,931.92
    3645 ROSE YAA AGYEMANG 2,931.31
    3646 NUMADO YAO JERRY 2,922.31
    3647 PATIENCE NOAMESI 2,915.11
    3648 CANN MANDELA WINNIE 2,915.11
    3649 YUSSIF A MOHAMMED 2,904.32
    3650 AMU ABIBA 2,904.32
    3651 MARIAM SERWAA 2,902.34
    3652 DARKO ESTHER 2,900.72
    3653 IRENE OSEI 2,898.70
    3654 OPOKU MARTHA 2,897.12
    3655 JOSEPHINE ABANKWA 2,896.76
    3656 OPOKU JOSEPH 2,895.53
    3657 AFRAM OPOKU PIUS 2,893.52
    3658 KOOMSON PAUL 2,893.48
    3659 MENDS IKE MARVIN 2,891.94
    3660 HAPPY ‘G’ ENTERPISE 2,890.39
    3661 HINSON COLLINS 2,887.40
    3662 ABREWA TAHIRU 2,885.75
    3663 MINTAH DANIEL 2,884.27
    3664 RICHARD YEBOAH 2,883.05
    3665 RICHARD NANOR 2,880.35
    3666 OWUSU FORDJOUR CLEMENT 2,879.12
    3667 STEPHEN KAFUI TETTEY 2,879.12
    3668 HON.WILLIAM ABOSA (PUSIGA) 2,879.12
    3669 MOHAMMED AHMED 2,879.12
    3670 DADZIE STEPHEN 2,879.12
    3671 DAWDA IBRAHIM 2,879.12
    3672 FRANCE VICTORIA 2,879.12
    3673 ABDULAI NAFISAH 2,879.12
    3674 ABDUL HAMID MOHAMMED 2,879.12
    3675 ADJOLOLO DANIEL 2,879.12
    3676 AGYAREWAA VRRONICA 2,879.12
    3677 ACHEAMPONG OTI BOATENG 2,879.12
    3678 AYINLA RAZAK 2,879.12
    3679 STEPHEN ENTSIE 2,875.70
    3680 JACKSON EWUSI EKOW 2,872.93
    3681 ESTHER AYIM ADJEI 2,871.78
    3682 GEORGE KWAKU DZADE 2,871.60
    3683 DWOMOH SOLOMON 2,870.13
    3684 FELICITY MENSAH 2,869.73
    3685 RAHMAN ABDUL RAHMAM 2,869.08
    3686 SARFO PHILIP 2,868.87
    3687 WINTEX VENTURES 2,868.07
    3688 MOHAMMED SULEMANA 2,868.07
    3689 ANDARATU YAHAYA 2,864.73
    3690 KOWFIE EDWARD 2,861.13
    3691 AMOAH ERIC 2,861.13
    3692 CYNTHIA SERWAA 2,857.71
    3693 KISSI ESTHER ASAAH 2,853.97
    3694 THOMPSON KWAMINA FRANCIS 2,852.60
    3695 STEPHEN PATRICK 2,852.17
    3696 NUHU ZENABU 2,851.16
    3697 ASARE CHIEF MARTINSON 2,850.33
    3698 SA-ADATU AWAL 2,849.54
    3699 DONKOR CHRISTINA 2,848.89
    3700 OCRAN AGARTHA 2,843.13
    3701 ALHAJI SUMAILA MAHAMA 2,840.44
    3702 JOSEPH BUABING (1185000000496) 2,835.94
    3703 FRANCIS AGBENYAVINGS 2,834.14
    3704 ARMAH BEATRICE 2,834.14
    3705 BINTU ABDULAI 2,832.34
    3706 NYAKOWAH ESI 2,831.58
    3707 THOMAS ODEI 2,826.69
    3708 GRACE DELLA ADALETEY 2,826.22
    3709 SYLVESTER MENSAH 2,825.14
    3710 MOHAMMED MURTALA IBRAHIM 2,825.14
    3711 YEBOAH MARY 2,823.63
    3712 ASARE WILHEMINA 2,819.13
    3713 ERICA GHANSAH 2,817.94
    3714 ESHUN MAVIS 2,815.67
    3715 MOHAMMED ALI 24 ENTERPRISE 2,815.49
    3716 ABUBAKARI ADAM 2,815.17
    3717 BENJAMIN YEDU BANSON 2,813.73
    3718 DEXTER EMMANUEL BOATENG 2,807.15
    3719 HELLENA TETTSIE 2,807.15
    3720 MEGAPHARM LTD 2,806.75
    3721 AGYEKUM LEWIS 2,803.62
    3722 SARAH ADENGIBA 2,799.08
    3723 BUKARI MOHAMMED FATI 2,797.39
    3724 AGYEI KINGSLEY 2,796.53
    3725 BAYENDEH JANET 2,795.74
    3726 ODOOM K SAMUEL 2,795.70
    3727 PAUL BENNEDY KORSAH 2,793.54
    3728 OPOKU-SINTIM FRANCIS 2,789.15
    3729 THOMAS NUNOO (1185000000778) 2,789.15
    3730 HUSSEIINI JEMILATU 2,789.15
    3731 BARBARA OHENEWA 2,789.15
    3732 MUNTAWAKILU YAKUBU 2,787.35
    3733 SEIDU PETER AYABAH 2,785.55
    3734 STEPHEN ODURO 2,785.30
    3735 ODURO STEPHEN 2,785.30
    3736 GYABAA DORCAS 2,779.83
    3737 AKAKPO LAWRENCE 2,778.39
    3738 ANDREWS ASANTE 2,777.63
    3739 MENASH RICHARD 2,774.94
    3740 GYIMAH ISSAH BAFFOUR 2,774.76
    3741 CHRISTIANA AMOAKU 2,771.44
    3742 ROSE OWUSU ANSAH 2,771.16
    3743 AZARE JOSEPH 2,770.76
    3744 AGYAPOMAAH ELIZABETH 2,768.82
    3745 MANSO FRIMPONG LAWRENCIA 2,768.74
    3746 SAMUEL ODURO SMC15 7518 2,768.03
    3747 KUSI EMMANUEL 2,767.56
    3748 ANDERSON REBECCA 2,767.56
    3749 FULERA ABDULAI 2,767.27
    3750 HEMENS ABA HILDA 2,763.13
    3751 PAA KWESI NYARKOH (1182000000093) 2,760.86
    3752 FRANCIS ADU 2,760.72
    3753 DEBRAH ABENA AGYEIWAA 2,759.28
    3754 OSMAN MOHAMMED 2,758.74
    3755 FATI ADAMS 2,756.76
    3756 JOYCE DUNCAN (1182000000152) 2,754.85
    3757 AMINA IDDRISU 2,748.09
    3758 KOBINA ACQUAH 2,746.43
    3759 HENRY VOLSUURI 2,744.06
    3760 DZOTEFE VICTOR 2,736.39
    3761 SULE ISSAH 2,735.17
    3762 EDITH ABADOO (1185000000537) 2,735.17
    3763 MOHAMMED FATIMA 2,735.10
    3764 KOBINA ABBAN KOOMSON 2,734.92
    3765 KINGDOM PETROLEUM 2,731.35
    3766 GRACE ESSIEN 2,727.97
    3767 AYENSU CHRISTINA 2,727.97
    3768 BARFFOUR JERRY 2,727.97
    3769 AWORTWE GRACE 2,727.97
    3770 OPATA ANNOR DENNIS 2,727.68
    3771 BLANKSON-AUSTIN ROSE 2,725.92
    3772 BANGNA KANLU 2,723.11
    3773 DASEBU HANNAH 2,720.77
    3774 EMMANUEL SARFO 2,717.17
    3775 AMPONSAH JOSEPH K 2,717.17
    3776 NKATIAH EMMANUEL 2,712.49
    3777 ADAM MUTAWAKIL GUNU 2,711.16
    3778 COMFORT WILSON 2,707.67
    3779 DARKWAH OPOKU ERIC 2,706.66
    3780 SARQUAH FELIX 2,704.40
    3781 BENARD BLAY 2,703.96
    3782 SABENG KWAKU 2,702.78
    3783 BOAKYE DELOVE 2,699.65
    3784 SEMANSHYIA FORSTER 2,699.36
    3785 OSEI BEN 2,699.18
    3786 KWAME ESSUMAN AMANYI 2,699.18
    3787 GIFTY TWUMASI 2,699.18
    3788 ASIEDU MAXWELL 2,699.18
    3789 GEORGE ADDAE 2,696.77
    3790 AMOAKO ROSE 2,695.58
    3791 ROYAL TRADERS AND FARMERS ASS. 2,693.20
    3792 ALFRED W. ASARE 2,691.44
    3793 ANANE KENNETH 2,689.82
    3794 ADEBI GODSON CEASAR 2,688.38
    3795 KUDAKPO JOHN KOSHIE 2,687.09
    3796 KASULE ALI 2,683.92
    3797 NKATIAH ABRAMO 2,681.18
    3798 OYE ELIZABETH 2,680.50
    3799 KOW HAWARD 2,679.78
    3800 AMPONSAH BISMARK 2,679.46
    3801 SENYO MOSES DEDITEY 2,679.02
    3802 ELIZABETH ADDO 2,677.48
    3803 GLORIA AFIA SERWAA 2,677.48
    3804 AMOAKO HYDE OBENG 2,673.99
    3805 ZIBRIM MOHAMMED 2,666.03
    3806 OPOKU ASI FRANKLIN 2,663.19
    3807 DAUDA ABDULAI 2,663.19
    3808 FUSEINI ABUDU LATIFU 2,663.19
    3809 FRIMPONG FREDERICK 2,661.86
    3810 KLEWIAH-FIO SAMUEL 2,658.55
    3811 DIABA RUTH 2,654.19
    3812 ESHUN REBECCA 2,650.09
    3813 BEATRICE AGOZI 2,650.09
    3814 JOYCE BOATENG 2,650.02
    3815 PEPRAH KWAME 2,649.62
    3816 DEYNU MERCY-DZIFA 2,648.72
    3817 BOATENG KATE 2,648.61
    3818 MERCY AGGREY 2,645.19
    3819 HATEKA DODZI 2,645.19
    3820 MESIMA FREIGHT 2,644.19
    3821 MENSAH ROBERT 2,639.18
    3822 G4S SECURITY SERVICES(TARKWA) 2,638.25
    3823 APPEAH ABENA 2,638.00
    3824 ABDUL RAHAMAN KADIR 2,637.42
    3825 DEBRAH YENTUMY KWAME PAUL 2,635.41
    3826 ALHASSAN AYI 2,634.00
    3827 ALHASSAN ANDARATU 2,632.60
    3828 KARIME IBRAHIM 2,631.73
    3829 ABUKARI AWABU 2,625.40
    3830 ALICE AYAMBA 2,623.60
    3831 ONUA FRANCIS COMPANY LIMITED 2,618.35
    3832 DEVASS GLOBAL NETWORK 2,618.35
    3833 TAWIAH AMO BERNARD 2,613.02
    3834 SIMONS BLESSING 2,609.21
    3835 MAVIS ACHEAMPONG 2,609.21
    3836 ROSEMARY NARTEY (1185000000120) 2,608.02
    3837 FESTUS KWAKYE ASOMANING 2,604.99
    3838 KYEREMAH RUTH 2,604.74
    3839 EVELYN KORANTENG 2,603.05
    3840 JOSEPH E. DADZIE (1182000000045) 2,602.66
    3841 BOLABI ATO 2,599.85
    3842 ISSIFU MUSAH 2,599.49
    3843 AYIKU ISAAC 2,599.13
    3844 OSEI DANIEL AMOAFO 2,591.21
    3845 CYNTHIA OSAE 2,591.21
    3846 AKOLOGO SIMON 2,591.21
    3847 AGYEMANG YAW 2,591.21
    3848 AMISAAH ROSE 2,591.07
    3849 BOATENG REBECCA 2,590.92
    3850 PAUL KUSI 2,589.99
    3851 OFORI EMMANUEL 2,588.91
    3852 OPOKU YAW EMMANUEL 2,588.84
    3853 KENNEDY AMEVOR 2,579.19
    3854 YAA KONADU 1045000002741 2,576.82
    3855 ENIM MARY 2,566.27
    3856 ABENA AGYEIWAA 2,562.64
    3857 CHARLES AWOTWE (1185000001082) 2,558.82
    3858 ERNESTINA BOAKYE 2,555.47
    3859 VICTORIA AYORKOR ADJEI 2,555.22
    3860 ILLIASU SAKINA 2,555.22
    3861 EWUSIE DANIEL 2,549.07
    3862 JETJAT ENTERPRISE 2,548.64
    3863 KINGSLEY MARK ROCKSON 2,545.90
    3864 NATHANIEL ADJANOR NATHANIEL AD 2,544.89
    3865 AZONKO SYNCHRONISATIONS LIMITED 2,542.88
    3866 JOHN SEKYI 2,540.83
    3867 ATUAHENE ALEX KWAME 2,537.23
    3868 BEMPOMAA EMELIA 2,537.08
    3869 BAMFO CHARLES 2,536.83
    3870 ERIC DSANE (1181000000188) 2,535.72
    3871 MENSAH KYEI EMMANUEL 2,526.79
    3872 BALCHISU MANSURU 2,526.36
    3873 AMOAH MARGARET 2,525.57
    3874 AYENSU ANTHONY 2,519.56
    3875 IBRAHIM NAFISAH 2,519.23
    3876 FREDRICK ADDAE ANSAH 1041000001737 2,519.23
    3877 EMMANUEL AMOAH 2,519.23
    3878 BOATENG ERNEST 2,519.23
    3879 COMFORT ARMAH 2,519.23
    3880 ACKAH PAULINA 2,519.23
    3881 KYERECE ENTERPRISE 2,516.32
    3882 YAKUBU ATO 2,515.63
    3883 BABA FATAHIA 2,514.16
    3884 IBRAHIM MARIAMA 2,512.04
    3885 ADIAMAH RUTH 2,505.20
    3886 ADZIKU AUGUSTA 2,504.84
    3887 NKANDO DANIEL NKANDO S/A 2,500.59
    3888 MUSAH SULE 2,497.64
    3889 JIM BROWN ORLEANS LICENCE CHEMICAL SHOP 2,497.03
    3890 JENNIFER AGYEMANG SERWAA 2,495.62
    3891 KWOFIE CHARLES 2,495.59
    3892 HANS & YOUNG COMPANY LIMITED 2,495.37
    3893 BLESSED LAWCINDY ENTERPRISE 2,494.80
    3894 ABA MANSAH 2,492.24
    3895 MARY OPOKUWAAH 2,489.07
    3896 NINSON VIDA 2,489.04
    3897 GYAMFI MARY-ANN 2,488.53
    3898 KWAKOFI PROSPER 2,488.32
    3899 SMITH KOFI MENSAH 2,487.74
    3900 EMELIA EWURABENA FAIBIL 2,486.16
    3901 ADEDZE BEN MOSES 2,484.47
    3902 FUSEINA RAHAMAN ABDUL- 2,483.24
    3903 HARRISON BEATRICE 2,476.05
    3904 ADJEI PHILOMENA 2,470.14
    3905 SIDAMBA TAHIR ALIYU 2,467.77
    3906 MENSAH VICTORIA 2,464.64
    3907 YUORI ENTERPRISE 2,460.39
    3908 JUSTINA OSEI BERKO 2,460.28
    3909 AGYEMANG KWABENA JOSEPH 2,454.81
    3910 AIMOOSON ANTHONY 2,453.66
    3911 HATHAN JOSEPHINE 2,450.85
    3912 ERIC APAU 2,447.69
    3913 QUAINOR EMMANUEL 2,447.25
    3914 CYNTHIA OWUSU 2,447.25
    3915 BABA A . ADJEI 2,447.25
    3916 ALAMU EBENEZER 2,446.54
    3917 JENNIFER OWUSU AFRIYIE 2,445.42
    3918 ADOMAH MONICA 2,444.74
    3919 MOHAMMED DAUD ANSUAR 2,441.89
    3920 IMORO ABDULAI 2,439.88
    3921 NTOW AKWASI SAMUEL 2,435.13
    3922 SAMUEL AMOAH 2,434.66
    3923 BANDA ENTERPRISE 2,431.64
    3924 ASIEDU YAW JUDE 2,429.26
    3925 SOWAH OKAI BENJAMIN 2,428.90
    3926 EBENEZER ANKUMAH 2,425.27
    3927 AFUA YEBOAH 1045000000583 2,422.06
    3928 APPOH EVANS 2,420.77
    3929 MAHAMADU SUWEBA 2,414.65
    3930 SHERIFF NANA 2,411.27
    3931 SALIFU ASAANA 2,411.27
    3932 BOSOKO JOANA 2,411.27
    3933 TAMAKLO GLADYS 2,407.67
    3934 ADEKA DAVID 2,407.67
    3935 AFUA ENTSIE 2,407.67
    3936 ASIGBEY OFORI WISDOM 2,407.45
    3937 JOSEPH AGGREY 2,406.80
    3938 MASHUD HAMZA 2,400.76
    3939 GEORGE K. NKANSAH 2,399.28
    3940 BAPENG NSOROBE 2,399.25
    3941 AGNES NYARKO (1185000000121) 2,399.25
    3942 ADJEI ASAFO 2,399.21
    3943 MAK STERGO LIMITED 2,398.60
    3944 ZIBLIM SAMATA 2,396.87
    3945 JULIANA BOSOMPEM 2,396.51
    3946 ADUKO MOSES 2,393.16
    3947 AKANGE EVANS 2,392.77
    3948 ODO NA EYE GROUP 2,392.48
    3949 STEPHEN KPORNYO 2,388.92
    3950 AGAPE NURSERY-GRACE ASANTE 2,383.52
    3951 SYLVESTER BORTEY 2,378.88
    3952 AGNES YEBOAH 2,378.88
    3953 AD-LOG MEDIA 2,377.04
    3954 RICHARD OSEI 2,376.50
    3955 RAPHAEL ANNOR 2,376.50
    3956 MAXWELL FOSU MANU 2,376.50
    3957 ISAAC OSEI BADU 2,376.50
    3958 MOHAMMED OSMAN 2,375.53
    3959 HANSON ABIGAIL 2,375.28
    3960 SHIRLEY AYITSOO ANNAN 2,374.23
    3961 ABDULAI ABUKARI IMORO 2,373.37
    3962 JOSEPHINE MISHIO 2,368.51
    3963 ISHA BAFOAH 2,368.08
    3964 DIANA AKOTO 2,366.78
    3965 BOAKYE LINDA 2,359.84
    3966 DARKO DICKSON 2,357.28
    3967 REGINA ADUBEA 2,356.49
    3968 HARUNA MASAHUDU 2,353.83
    3969 SALIFU AYISHA 2,353.68
    3970 APPIAH KUSI JONHSON 2,351.38
    3971 ODOI NAOMI 2,351.31
    3972 REJOICE ASASE 2,349.58
    3973 MATILDA ABRI 2,349.58
    3974 FELICIA AVORGBEDOR 2,349.58
    3975 CHRIS AKWASI YEBOAH 2,344.18
    3976 DOREEN M. (MRS) MANIESON THOMAS 2,339.72
    3977 SOWAH RAHEL 2,339.29
    3978 JOHN KOJO APPAH 2,339.29
    3979 COFFIE FLORENCE 2,339.29
    3980 DAUTEY RICHARD 2,339.29
    3981 ERIC ARHIN 2,339.29
    3982 MOHAMMED ABDALLAH 2,339.07
    3983 AYAMGA JANET 2,336.55
    3984 OFORI TIMOTHY 2,335.72
    3985 GORDON DANQUAH 2,334.68
    3986 IBRAHIM MUMUNI ABDUL 2,332.09
    3987 ADIME CHARLES AMOAH 2,328.60
    3988 GRACE AGYIRI 2,328.49
    3989 AGNES ROBERTS 2,324.89
    3990 ADISATU MORO 2,324.89
    3991 ESI KWA KYEWAH 2,323.42
    3992 TREND ARENA LIMITED 2,322.70
    3993 YAKUBU ABUYAMA 2,321.83
    3994 TSEKPETSE ESINAM 2,321.29
    3995 ASAIBA SAMIRA 2,321.29
    3996 ZEWUZE CLEMENTINA 2,317.51
    3997 LINDA NYARKO GC 2,317.12
    3998 JOHN SARSAH 2,316.07
    3999 NYABBA JANET 2,314.78
    4000 MATIDA BONUEDI 2,313.16
    4001 ESSEL DAVID 2,311.97
  • 400 ANAMOLGA CHARLES 2,309.70
    4003 ACKAH B.N JEROM 2,308.37
    4004 ANANGA ALEX 2,305.75
    4005 ASAMAOH EUNICE 2,303.30
    4006 IDDRISU MASAWUDU 2,303.23
    4007 BRENYA CECILIA 2,302.18
    4008 ALBERT SIMPSON 2,299.70
    4009 ROSE POMAA 2,297.90
    4010 AHMED MOHAMMED 2,293.19
    4011 KOFI AGYARE 2,289.44
    4012 AHWIREN O JOANA 2,287.82
    4013 ALHASSAN IBRAHIM 2,287.03
    4014 TWUMASI YAW 2,285.30
    4015 SALAMATU IBRAHIM 2,285.30
  • 4016 FRIMPONG YENTUMI KWASI 2,285.30
    4017 MACARTHY JOYCE 2,283.68
    4018 KISSEWAA GLORIA NYAMEKYE 2,281.89
    4019 ANTHONY MENSAH EOANR 2,281.74
    4020 AGYKUM SOLOMON 2,281.60
    4021 AMADU AMANDI 2,278.14
    4022 FAUSTINA AGYAPONG 2,277.96
    4023 JOHN GAMELI SEKEY 2,276.31
    4024 HEAVEN’S ROCKMERCHANT 2,276.16
    4025 ABUKARI KUDUUS 2,274.36
    4026 ABDULAI KANDE 2,273.75
    4027 BAMKOLE EUNICE 2,273.46
    4028 MENSAH AMOAH DAVID 2,271.16
    4029 NSIAH THOMAS 2,269.47
    4030 YEBOAH FRANCIS 2,267.31
    4031 ENYO MILLICENT 2,267.31
    4032 AMIRIKO ABIIRO A. 2,267.31
    4033 NKPE KUDJO JOSEPH 2,267.09
    4034 BOATENG PETER 2,267.09
    4035 STEPHEN ACHEAMPONG KWABENA 2,263.93
    4036 QUAICOE ABRAHAM 2,263.93
    4037 OFORI KWAKU ANTHONY 2,263.75
    4038 AMPONSAH AGNES 2,263.71
    4039 MOHAMMED MUSAH 2,261.77
    4040 BOAKYE KOJO WILLIAMS 2,254.75
    4041 ROKUFFO TRADING AND CONSTRUCTION LIMITED 2,252.84
    4042 IDDRISU B SAKINA 2,252.70
    4043 MARIAMA SALAM 2,252.19
    4044 OWUSU SELASE RICHARD 2,251.94
    4045 OBENG VICTORIA 2,251.73
    4046 KARIM AISHETU 2,249.32
    4047 AMINU IDDRISU 2,249.32
    4048 BAIDEN JOSEPHINE 2,249.32
    4049 ABDUL IDDRISU RAHAMAN 2,246.94
    4050 QUAINOO EKUA GIFTY 2,245.72
    4051 MUMUNI MUTALA 2,245.72
    4052 ADIKO HARRISON 2,245.54
    4053 MORRISON AMA MARY 2,242.05
    4054 BANKINI SABUGU 2,240.46
    4055 YAA FRIMPOMAA 2,237.29
    4056 OWUSU KATE 2,235.71
    4057 APPIAH ALBERT SAM 2,234.78
    4058 MACLAIR BENEDICTA 2,234.45
    4059 BRIGHT YAW OBIRI 2,234.09
    4060 ATO ACQUAH 2,233.55
    4061 Fatawu Abdallah 2,231.32
    4062 ADASHINA ISAAC 2,231.32
    4063 AZARATU ABDULAI 2,229.45
    4064 DANIEL DANKWAH 2,227.87
    4065 EMMA GRAY BAAFI SEKYERE 2,227.33
    4066 BARNIE CHARLES 2,223.94
    4067 REBECCA ANIMA 2,220.52
    4068 DAWUDA OSUMAN 2,220.52
  • 4069 ASANTE CHARLES 2,218.08
    4070 ZAKARIA RAHINATU 2,214.30
    4071 ZULKANENI BUKARI 2,212.93
    4072 WISDOM DOGBE 2,211.56
    4073 PETER ROCK ESSIEN 2,210.91
    4074 TETTEH COMFORT 2,209.73
    4075 ANTHONY ABRAHAM (1185000000420) 2,207.39
    4076 ABUBAKARI SEIDU 2,206.67
    4077 KUMAH MENSAH 2,206.13
    4078 OKWAN HANNAH 2,202.53
    4079 ENOCH AGBALE 2,202.53
    4080 ASOMANING PATRICK KOFI 2,199.22
    4081 FELICIA OSANI 2,198.64
    4082 BOATENG BRAKO JAMES 2,197.96
    4083 ISSAHAKU SAAKA 2,195.33
    4084 FRANK AKWASI APPIAH 2,195.33
    4085 AHIMA COLVIN KOFI 2,195.33
    4086 ABDULAI A RAHIM 2,195.33
    4087 LABI YAKUBU LAON 2,191.73
    4088 EMELIA BOAHEN 2,184.75
    4089 ODURO MILLICENT 2,184.46
    4090 MEMBONG SABASTIAN 2,180.68
    4091 JEC HYDRAULICS 2,180.58
    4092 ROSE AGBATOR 2,179.14
    4093 ABUBAKARI ISSA 2,175.39
    4094 OFORI AKWASI 2,174.75
    4095 MARY EKUFFUL 2,174.21
    4096 BRIGID OWUSU 2,170.14
    4097 RICHARD OWUSU 2,169.31
    4098 AGBOGAH PATRICK 2,162.94
    4099 MARIA SUMAILA 2,159.34
    4100 KATE O. ADJOA SAM(1182000000100) 2,159.34
    4101 KOFI AGYEMANG DIATUO 2,159.34
    4102 GIDIGLO ANITA 2,159.34
    4103 ADAMS SUSANA 2,159.34
    4104 ACQUAAH NORRIS 2,159.34
    4105 YAKUBU ALIMATU 2,159.13
    4106 OKAI RICHARD 2,158.98
    4107 AKUMBASI ATAMBIRI 2,158.95
    4108 OBO CLEMENT 2,156.50
    4109 OFOE STEPHEN TEYE L 2,156.03
    4110 ADAMU RASHAD 2,155.53
    4111 BENJAMIN TETTEH 2,155.46
    4112 SAMUEL OWUSU-AFRIYIE 2,151.35
    4113 ALHASSAN JEMILATU 2,150.78
    4114 AMOAH CONSTANCE 2,150.31
    4115 ERIC OPOKU MENSAH 2,150.02
    4116 BABACO VENTURES 2,148.44
    4117 CYNTHIA ALAARA 2,147.83
    4118 ASAMOAH IRENE 2,144.95
    4119 AMOATENG STEPHEN 2,144.01
    4120 ISAAC AMANKWAH 2,142.57
    4121 SARAH DONOR 2,137.75
  • 4122 JOHN SERBEH 2,136.13
    4123 DOGBATSE SAMUEL 2,135.09
    4124 OMARI ERNEST 2,130.55
    4125 MUSLIH MUHIB 2,128.46
    4126 VIOLET YAA OFORI EA 2,126.95
    4127 ELIZABETH ASIEDU 2,126.95
    4128 DAWUDA YAHUZA 2,126.95
    4129 ASAMPANA AKURIGO 2,126.27
    4130 RWIREDUA RUTH 2,125.66
    4131 SAMUEL NIKOI 2,125.30
    4132 POWER SOURCE PUBLICATIONS 2,123.75
    4133 TIDI GILBERT 2,123.21
    4134 MINAWARA BAWA 2,121.48
    4135 ALHASSAN RAFIATU 2,118.42
    4136 BOADU ESTHER 2,118.10
    4137 SALAMATU TAHIRU 2,114.82
    4138 ABDALLAH ALHASSAN 2,114.57
    4139 OPOKU AKWASI FRANCIS 2,112.56
    4140 ABASS MOHAMMED 2,110.43
    4141 ISSAH HABIBA 2,108.96
    4142 ANTHONY GYEKYE 2,105.36
    4143 ANDREWS NANA SAKYI 2,105.36
    4144 STELLA THOMPSON 2,105.32
    4145 SARFO BOATENG ROSEMOND 2,105.29
    4146 YAMOAH ALEX 2,101.76
    4147 ADUSEI-POKU BOATENG GLADYS 2,101.69
    4148 OWUSU LILIAN 2,099.71
    4149 NICHOLAS ZUMANAA 2,099.60
    4150 MICHAEL KWESI FORSON 2,098.88
    4151 YEBOAH RICHARD 2,098.52
    4152 ESSUOMAN RICHARD 2,097.80
    4153 ABREWA ABDUL RAHAMAN 2,096.43
    4154 PHILIP LAHAI TAILOR LOAN A/C LAHAI TAYLOR 2,096.36
    4155 YEBOAH OBIRI 2,094.42
    4156 SUALE YUSSIF 2,092.33
    4157 OPPONG SAMUEL 2,087.36
    4158 BEATRICE ANOFUL 2,087.26
    4159 AVORTY JAMES 2,087.18
    4160 ADUONIN EMMANUEL 2,086.54
    4161 BARFOA AKUA 2,084.38
    4162 WEREKO ERIC 2,082.11
    4163 JOSHUA ACQUAAH (1185000000137) 2,081.57
    4164 GRACE ROBERTSON 2,081.10
    4165 ZARIATU ABDULAI 2,080.17
    4166 BONDZIE ALBERTA 2,080.17
    4167 ANSAH KATE 2,072.97
    4168 ADAM ALHASSAN 2,068.58
    4169 REBECCA SOAT 2,068.58
    4170 SIMON KUBIL 2,068.58
    4171 JULIANA KWAMSON 2,068.58
    4172 ESTHER KUBIL BOURA 2,068.58
    4173 HAWA SEIDU 2,068.58
    4174 FELICIA WEMEGAH 2,068.58
  • 4175 FAUSTINA KPORHAH 2,068.58
    4176 MUNIRU ABUDU 2,067.03
    4177 EMMANUEL ODOI 2,066.27
    4178 BAFFOUR GYAU 2,061.67
    4179 MOHAMMED YAHUZA 2,061.34
    4180 OSEI-ANNANG MOHAMMED 2,058.57
    4181 THERESA OFOSUA 2,056.05
    4182 REGINA METTLE 2,052.92
    4183 OTOO SOLOMON 2,051.38
    4184 KOJO GYEKYE 2,051.38
    4185 DINA TSORKOR 2,044.18
    4186 SEY COMFORT 2,043.10
    4187 AGBAYIZA AGBO BELIEVE 2,040.58
    4188 NINNAH NUWUABIKYE 2,039.36
    4189 DORKPO JULIANA 2,039.36
    4190 AKOMBARE A. WILLIAM 2,038.24
    4191 THELMA ACQUAH 2,031.73
    4192 DARKO YAW SAMPSON 2,030.36
    4193 BEATRICE DONKOH 2,027.08
    4194 DAVIES ERIC 2,026.18
    4195 KYEI BAFFOUR KINGSLEY 2,025.82
    4196 AWABU YAKUBU 2,024.02
    4197 MOHAMMED SEIDU 2,021.00
    4198 KPOGLI RANDOLPH 2,015.39
    4199 KLU ESTHER 2,015.39
    4200 HARUNA BUKARI 2,015.39
    4201 CUDJOE FRED 2,015.39
    4202 AIDOO CELESTINA 2,014.16
    4203 OBIRI GILBERT 2,010.89
    4204 KENNEDY PRINCE. 2,009.59
    4205 ENOCK TETTEH 2,003.65
    4206 Others 2,511,897.95
    GHS 423,635,1

Source: Graphic.com,gh

]]>
Audio: Fake Kwesi Botchwey story engineered by NPP – NDC https://www.adomonline.com/audio-fake-kwesi-botchwey-story-engineered-by-npp-ndc/ Tue, 20 Aug 2019 13:10:14 +0000 https://www.adomonline.com/?p=1694947

The National Democratic Congress (NDC) has denied media reports that Professor Kwesi Botchwey, a former Finance Minister, has been chosen to become the running mate to John Dramani Mahama.

Peter Otokunor, Deputy General Secretary of the party, has accused the New Patriotic Party (NPP) of being behind such false news.

ALSO READ: Murder of Otumfuo’s relative: Farmer, Preacher give ‘key evidence’ to police

According to him, it is a strategy by the NPP to divert the attention of Ghanaians from the government’s involvement in the PDS scandal.

“Immediately we heard such a story, we realized it was from our opponents, the NPP,” he alleged.

He has described the move as an attempt by the company to divert attention from the raging Power Distribution Services (PDS) scandal and the recent activities of NAM1 because the government would soon be exposed.

“Mahama has not picked any running mate” he stressed on Accra-based radio station, Neat FM monitored by Adomonline.com.

ALSO READ: 23 Menzgold customers dead so far; most bedridden

State-owned online news portal, Graphic Online, had reported that Professor Botchwey, had been tipped to become the running mate to the former President John Dramani Mahama for Election 2020.

The report had claimed that Prof Botchwey’s name came up for the appointment at a meeting on August 19, 2019, and would be announced later.

ALSO READ: Video: I never jumped bail to Dubai; EOCO knew my whereabouts – NAM1

Mr Otokunor said Mr Mahama would have to go through the process of selecting a running mate and must have the approval of the council before a proper selection is made.

Describing the story as a hollow one, the Deputy General Secretary urged party members and Ghanaians to remain calm as the running mate, when selected, would be announced to them.

Source: Adomonline.com|Dorcas Abedu-Kennedy

]]>
GH¢800 million scandal: Audit on Ghana Gas ‘disgusting, shoddy’ – Valerie Sawyerr https://www.adomonline.com/gh%c2%a2800-million-scandal-audit-on-ghana-gas-disgusting-shoddy-valerie-sawyerr/ Fri, 21 Sep 2018 12:02:47 +0000 http://35.232.176.128/ghana-news/?p=1346561 A former Chief of Staff in the John Mahama administration has described an aspect Cabinet-sanctioned audit of the financials of six state institutions as “disgusting and shoddy.”

Dr Valerie Sawyerr, who is also a former board member of Ghana Gas Company Limited — which the report alleged could not account for some purchased helicopters — has said the allegations are unfounded.

Related: Audit reveals GH¢800m ‘misappropriated by six state institutions’

MORE: Osagyefo Dr. Kwame Nkrumah: The idea, strength of Africa’s liberation

Ghana Gas allegations

The forensic audit, initiated by the Cabinet Committee Responsible for the Coordination of Forensic Audits and conducted by Morrison and Associates revealed gross procurement irregularities amounting to $137,861,127.15 at the Ghana National Gas Company during the erstwhile administration of John Mahama.

The forensic audit showed that helicopters purchased from China National Aero-Technology Import and Export Corporation (CATIC) by Ghana Gas “have never been used for purpose of its purchase.”

As a result of this, according the report, a “financial loss to the state” to the tune of $54,800,000 was caused.

According to the report, this incident happened when Dr Kwesi Botchwey was the Board Chairman of the Ghana National Gas Company, with Dr Valerie Sawyerr, Mr. Eric Yankah, Thomas Manu, and the former CEO George Sipa-Adjah Yankey as members of the board.

The report also stated that the equipment for the helicopters worth $5,958,366.76 “were not delivered even though it was part of the contract price.”

“Abnitio training cost not fully utilized for its intended purpose” amounts to $300,000, making a total of $61,058,366.756, the auditors stated.

The report also revealed that procurement breaches worth $34,451,650.22 and $42,351,110.17 in contracts with Memphis Metropolitan Limited and Kingspok Company Limited respectively.

Reacting to the report in a piece published on Thursday, September 20, 2018, Dr Valerie Sawyerr said, “this shoddy work being passed off as a Cabinet Report is disgusting, to say the least!”

In the piece, published in full below, she explains the allegations about the helicopters as follows:

“Yes, four helicopters were purchased for coastal surveillance and other related matters under the Gas Infrastructure Project as part of the CDB facility.

Since Ghana Gas did not intend to set up an Aviation Wing, it designated the Ghana Air Force to take over and manage the helicopters, associated equipment and required training.

The Ghana Air Force is the agency of Government, which operates and keeps custody of the helicopters. GAF negotiated the cost and specifications of the helicopters and dealt directly with CATIC on all technical matters.

In September 2015, there was a public ceremony where the helicopters were handed over to the Ghana Air Force. The ceremony was covered live on air. The President was present. Most newspapers carried it.

Speeches made on that day reflected that the helicopters would be used for surveillance and monitoring responsibilities to secure installations like gas pipelines and allied operations across the country. That they would be used to enhance maritime security, anti-piracy operations, rig-bound medical and casualty evacuation, search and rescue operations, aerial photography, riot control and traffic management, disaster management, anti-sea-bound narcotic interdiction operations.

In May 2017, after tales of lost helicopters hit the airwaves, the NPP-appointed Management of Ghana Gas clarified that the helicopters procured for the security surveillance of the oil and gas enclave in the Western Region were stationed at the Air Force Headquarters at Burma Camp.

Did the so-called Secretary of the Cabinet Committee not find this out in his deep sea fishing expedition? Is it that he does not even know how to ‘google’ and read, in case all other investigative processes failed him?

Did he engage the Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) or the Ghana Air Force to find out where the equipment is, whether all extra equipment was delivered in accordance with the agreement, what personnel were trained? Or did he expect Ghana Gas to supervise the Air Force patrols or to train pilots?

Is he challenging the competency of the Chief of Air Staff, Air Vice Marshall Mantsebi Tei-Nagai, or his predecessor, Air Vice Marshall M. Samson-Oje? Or is it an attempt to malign the Chief of Defence Staff Major General Obed Akwa?”

Read the full reply to the report by Dr Valerie Sawyerr below.

HELICOPTERS IN CHAMBER POTS …a reaction to forensic audit by ‘ghosts’

VALERIE SAWYERR•THURSDAY, 20 SEPTEMBER 2018

I have read all sorts of articles in the newspapers today, September 20, 2018, based on what is claimed to be a report of a so-called ‘Cabinet Committee Responsible for the Coordination of Investigations/Forensic Audits’.

The allegations? That Ghana Gas purchased helicopters from China National Aero Technology Import & Export Corporation (CATIC), but they have never been used for the purpose of its purchase thus causing financial loss to the state of US$54,800,000.00; that the equipment for the helicopters was not delivered even though it was part of the contract price (US$5,958,366.76) and that ab initio training cost was not fully utilised for its intended purposes (US$300,000.00).

Then came the interesting part where members of the Ghana Gas board on which I served are listed in the ‘report’ and in the publications as though we have all been approached to account for the helicopters and associated matters.

Yes, four helicopters were purchased for coastal surveillance and other related matters under the Gas Infrastructure Project as part of the CDB facility.

Since Ghana Gas did not intend to set up an Aviation Wing, it designated the Ghana Air Force to take over and manage the helicopters, associated equipment, and required training.

The Ghana Air Force is the agency of Government, which operates and keeps custody of the helicopters. GAF negotiated the cost and specifications of the helicopters, and dealt directly with CATIC on all technical matters.

In September 2015, there was a public ceremony where the helicopters were handed over to the Ghana Air Force. The ceremony was covered live on air. The President was present. Most newspapers carried it.

Speeches made on that day reflected that the helicopters would be used for surveillance and monitoring responsibilities to secure installations like gas pipelines and allied operations across the country. That they would be used to enhance maritime security, anti-piracy operations, rig-bound medical and casualty evacuation, search and rescue operations, aerial photography, riot control and traffic management, disaster management, anti-sea-bound narcotic interdiction operations.

In May 2017, after tales of lost helicopters hit the airwaves, the NPP-appointed Management of Ghana Gas clarified that the helicopters procured for the security surveillance of the oil and gas enclave in the Western Region were stationed at the Air Force Headquarters at Burma Camp.

Did the so-called Secretary of the Cabinet Committee not find this out in his deep sea fishing expedition? Is it that he does not even know how to ‘google’ and read, in case all other investigative processes failed him?

Did he engage the Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) or the Ghana Air Force to find out where the equipment is, whether all extra equipment was delivered in accordance with the agreement, what personnel were trained? Or did he expect Ghana Gas to supervise the Air Force patrols or to train pilots?

Is he challenging the competency of the Chief of Air Staff, Air Vice Marshall Mantsebi Tei-Nagai, or his predecessor, Air Vice Marshall M. Samson-Oje? Or is it an attempt to malign the Chief of Defence Staff Major General Obed Akwa?

Is the current management of Ghana Gas looking for lost helicopters? Did we take the helicopters with us when we left office? Why haven’t they searched our homes to see if the helicopters are hidden in our chamber pots?

Was the so-called investigator aware that the board members he listed in his ‘awam’ report were not the Ghana Gas board members on January 6, 2017, just before Government changed hands? Or did a very simple thing like that escape his eager digging claws?

Did he contact the board members that came after our board to find out if the helicopters are under their beds?

Has he contacted the current board members to find out if the helicopters are in their wives’ and/or husbands’ closets?

This shoddy work being passed off as a Cabinet Report is disgusting, to say the least!

How was Dua Agyeman made Secretary of a Cabinet Committee or Cabinet Sub-Committee when he is not a member of Cabinet or the Secretary to Cabinet? The Secretary to Cabinet is secretary to all Cabinet meetings, Cabinet Committee meetings or Cabinet Sub-Committee meetings. A non-cabinet member is not allowed to chair such meetings or hold the position of secretary.

How were private firms authorized to carry out all these ‘audits’? The Auditor-General is the only one with power to audit government agencies. Before a private firm can audit a government agency the Auditor-General must grant permission officially. Did the Auditor-General grant permission for all these private firms to conduct ‘unauthorized audits’ of government agencies?

Is this the usual Akufo-Addo style of work, running roughshod over laid down rules and regulations?

Unless it is a fake document concocted by unseen hands, how was a Cabinet document leaked so profusely that at least three NPP newspapers carried it all on the same day?

And have journalists stopped even superficial investigative work prior to releasing stories? Do their journalistic memories not even manage to straddle a few years back when a live ceremony in September 2015 evidenced the handing over of the helicopters to the Ghana Air Force? Did any of them have any editorial suggesting their own findings in the matter?

Is Ghana safe under President Akufo-Addo? Are other sensitive and confidential cabinet documents being leaked in same manner?

The Cabinet Secretary, Madam Debrah-Karikari, must investigate this ‘azaa’ leak and put her findings in the public domain. Otherwise, she must hang her head in shame and resign with immediate effect. When the Ben Eghan(s) and Roger Ansongwini(s) were at post, we did not see such grossly incompetent lapses. This must not be seen under a female Cabinet Secretary!

As for Dua Agyeman, the least said about him the better. An elderly man who declared a personal vendetta against me during President Mills’ era because I was instructed to write to him informing him that he was not entitled to certain benefits he was vociferously claiming. Massa, I noted all your demonic moves, skewed articles in the papers and slip-sliding permutations, but I decided to ignore you because I was an officer at the Office of the President and I deemed it proper to remain silent in the face of adversity. I am chilling in Opposition now, so I dare you to try me. Is this the expertise you offered a sitting Government? And then you gleefully signed your name as Secretary to a Cabinet Committee. Your haste for revenge will cause you to trip.

I noted in the last paragraph your request for renewal of UNDP support and a vehicle for your own use. Is this what the UNDP is wasting its money on? Funding you while Auditor-General complains of your interference with his work? Churning out reports lacking in quality and substance?

… and there you go again, wanting this and wanting that – this time it is a car you are begging for. What is this seemingly insatiable appetite for material things? Did the chairman and members of the Cabinet Committee, if they exist, approve that you add that to the ‘report’? Ayoooooo!

Your Excellency, President Nana Addo Dankwah Akuffo Addo, my name is Valerie Sawyerr, and my wrists are ready for your shackles!!!

… but before you send your Tsar Bomba after me, please tell me why the Startimes arbitration procedure in London was discontinued and how they were given an enhanced contract under your supervision, while Startimes was at the same time sponsoring the First Lady’s Foundation. I mean your wife!

… and do you remember that the Tsar Bomba blasted beyond expectation flattening villages hundreds of kilometers from ground zero, and almost consuming those who deployed it? Our elders say that it is not all the rivers you bathe in … you must leave some to drink from!

They say I am for war, but the truth is …

I am for peace … Shalom!

September 20, 2018

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Audio: Doves, Girls Girls for Mahama, others caused NDC’s defeat – Solomon Nkansah https://www.adomonline.com/audio-doves-girls-girls-for-mahama-others-caused-ndcs-defeat-solomon-nkansah/ https://www.adomonline.com/audio-doves-girls-girls-for-mahama-others-caused-ndcs-defeat-solomon-nkansah/#comments Fri, 07 Sep 2018 10:48:47 +0000 http://35.232.176.128/ghana-news/?p=1315641

Aspiring National Organizer of the opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC), Solomon Nkansah, says he will disband all splinter groups in the NDC which were formed by people he described as “politically opportunistic smart guys”.

Mr Nkansah said the vulgar display of opulence by groups like Doves for Mahama, Friends of Mahama and many others made the NDC unattractive, leading to the party’s defeat in the 2016 general elections.

ALSO READ: 4 Zongo youth killed in Kumasi laid to rest amid heavy security [Photos]

In the run-up to the crucial elections, the NDC formed many splinter groups to promote the second term bid of President John Mahama.

Groups likes ‘Girls Girls for Mahama,’ ‘Zongo Girls for Mahama,’ ‘Zongo for Mahama,’ ‘Youth for Mahama,’ ‘Celebrities for Mahama,’ ‘Mahama Ladies,’ ‘I Choose JM,’ ‘Ambassadors for Mahama,’ Doves for Mahama’ and others, were formed with massive resources from the Flagstaff House to prosecute the agenda.

But the formation of such groups proved ineffective as Ghanaians rejected Mahama and rather voted for Nana Akufo-Addo.

ALSO READ: Family of 6 drown at Adagya [Photo]

In a 455-page report to the party’s leadership, by the Chairman of a 13-member committee chaired by Professor Kwesi Botchwey, it blamed the NDC’s defeat on the conduct of such splinter groups.

Speaking on Adom FM’s morning show, Dwaso Nsem Friday, Solomon Nkansah said the Prof Botchwey report vindicated his position on the formation of such groups.

He explained that the splinter groups were not formed in accordance with formal party structures, a situation he said resulted in competition for campaign resources.

Some party members have claimed that the pro-Mahama groups became more powerful in terms of campaign resources than the party’s structures, including the national executive.

ALSO READ: NCCE condemns Asiedu Nketia over vigilante comment

I vehemently opposed it as a communications officer of the party because it was politically incorrect, unacceptable, improper and needless. I will disband all these groups if elected as National Organizer,” he opined.

Solomon Nkansah underscored the need for the NDC to reconnect with its social democratic philosophy of putting the people first to address their socio-economic needs.

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Mahama’s 2020 eligibility rests with Parliament – Ken Kuranchie avers https://www.adomonline.com/mahamas-2020-eligibility-rests-with-parliament-ken-kuranchie-avers/ Fri, 31 Aug 2018 06:32:07 +0000 http://35.232.176.128/ghana-news/?p=1298601 Managing Editor of the Searchlight newspaper, Ken Kuranchie, believes he has found a clause in the Constitution that explicitly bars former President John Mahama from contesting again as President unless Parliament permits him.

He refers to Article 68 (2) of the 1992 Constitution which states: “The President shall not, on leaving office as President, hold any office of profit or emolument, except with the permission of Parliament, in any establishment, either directly or indirectly, other than that of the State.”

Speaking on Thursday evening on MultiTV’s current affairs programme, PM Express, Mr Kuranchie said the day Mr Mahama left office as President, the Constitution subsumed him under the ownership of Parliament.

READ: Man dies in police cells; Family accuse cops of torturing

John Mahama, in his opinion, cannot take any action concerning emoluments — including contesting for President of Ghana again — without seeking Parliament’s permission first.

“Between twelve midnight of 6th January 2013 and the morning when the next President was sworn-in — when Mahama left office — he became a creature that was owned by the Parliament of this country,” he said.

He thinks Parliament has failed to act according to the provision in the Constitution because since Mr Mahama left office, he has obtained some allowances or stipends in his numerous travels to monitor elections or represent international bodies for humanitarian causes.

LISTEN: AUDIO: Pastors, friends predicting Mahama’s win in 2020 are money-hungry – Bempah

Watch more in the video below.

Former President Mahama on August 23, 2018, announced his intention to contest for the upcoming presidential primaries to lead the party in the 2020 general elections.

A letter to that effect was presented on his behalf by a delegation led by Ghana’s former US Ambassador Daniel Ohene Agyekum.

Since then, there have been suggestions he may not be eligible to contest as President.

LISTEN: AUDIO: NDC 2020: Back off! – Mahama man tells Prof. Kwesi Botchwey

Former President Mahama lost power after serving his first four-year term.

Although the Constitution allows a President to stay in power for two four-year terms if he is elected after each term, many have said the law may not allow Mr Mahama to contest again.

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Love charms work – Spiritualist asserts [Audio] https://www.adomonline.com/love-charms-work-spiritualist-asserts-audio/ Wed, 29 Aug 2018 19:18:38 +0000 http://35.232.176.128/ghana-news/?p=1296141

A man highly endowed in spiritual affairs, Peter Hammond, says love charms are real and never a fallacy.

According to him, love charms, popularly known as “for girls” and “for boys” in Ghana, are widely used and they have had their desired effects on many individuals.

READ ALSO: NDC 2020: Back off! – Mahama man tells Prof. Kwesi Botchwey [Audio]

The charms, according to him are used spiritually to get the attention of both genders, especially in relationships when conflicts occur between two parties or individuals, adding that some spiritualists also use them to woo people into their churches.

“Some so-called Prophets and men of God use these ways and means to woo members into their churches, revealing that this practice of the charms often starts from small but eventually progresses to become occultism…” he said on Asempa FM’s Abrabo show Wednesday.

ALSO READ: I have no threat in contest for NDC Eastern Regional Chairman – Basil Ahiable

Mr. Hammong also revealed that zodiac signs, nails, hair, even clothes of an individual when used, can contribute to the effectiveness of a charm.

He has, therefore, advised people who patronize charms to stay away from them as they have adverse effects.

ALSO READ: National cathedral a pact between government and Christian community – C’ttee member

He further advised the youth to hold on to their faith in God as these charms may work but in vain.

Play the attached audio for more on the  Abrabo show.

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AUDIO: NDC 2020: Back off! – Mahama man tells Prof. Kwesi Botchwey https://www.adomonline.com/audio-ndc-2020-back-off-mahama-man-tells-prof-kwesi-botchwey/ Wed, 29 Aug 2018 17:35:13 +0000 http://35.232.176.128/ghana-news/?p=1296121

Ghana’s longest-serving Finance minister Prof Kwesi Botchwey has been told to back off the race for the 2020 flagbearer of the opposition party.

“What the NDC knows is John Mahama”, NDC Central Regional chairman Allotey Jacobs said.

Prof. Kwesi Botchwey is yet to officially declare his intention to contest for flagbearer even though he has been rumoured to be lacing his boots for the race.

The clearest indication was given in a press statement after a Myjoyonline.com story said he had picked nomination forms for the position of National Chairman.

ALSO: AUDIO: Asiedu Nketia angry over “begging” claims

Acting through a spokesperson, he quickly denied picking forms and lambasted “faceless persons” who are “desperate, wicked, and devious with the intent of portraying him as inconsistent with his decisions”.

Prof. Botchwey whose last electoral contest came in 2002 in a flagbearer race has said he will announce his intentions in the coming days.

But launching a pre-emptive strike on Accra-based Peace FM Wednesday, Allotey Jacobs said “what I will tell Prof. Kwesi Botchwey is, back off!”

He said the time for the Central region is over, indicating Prof. Mills’ feat will not be emulated in the 2020 race.

Prof. Mills who hails from the Central region, a swing region in national elections, won the NDC flagbearer race in 2002 and 2006 and went on to win the 2008 presidential elections.

But he died whiles in office in July 2012 and was replaced by John Mahama. As a tribute to the Central region’s political contributions to the NDC,  an indigene from the region Paa Kwesi Amissah-Arthur was chosen as Vice-President.

But the NDC lost the 2016 general elections and the country also lost the former Vice-President Kwesi Amissah-Arthur suddenly.

The Central region fell to the NPP after the NDC won only four out of 23 seats in the region, losing 12 seats they held.

An expected Kwesi Botchwey entrance could change this.

But Allotey Jacobs said Prof. Kwesi Botchwey “cannot have his cake and eat it”, referring to his attempt to gain an unfair advantage in the 2020 race.

Prof. Botchwey headed a 13-member committee tasked to investigate the NDC’s abysmal performance in the 2016 general elections.

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“Prof Botchwey is highly respected in the NDC as well as by the general public”, Mr. Jacobs conceded.

If President Jerry Rawlings’ first Finance minister confirms his interest, he looks set to use this background and considerable information to his advantage.

Allotey Jacobs said he would have wished Prof. Kwesi Botchwey would wait to serve as head of the Economic Management Team under a future Mahama government.

The head of the EMT has always been a Vice-President. Allotey Jacobs said he expected Prof. Botchwey who served 13 years as Finance minister would serve on committees to design the NDC’s economic plans ahead of the 2020 elections.

“That is where we need Prof. Kwesi Botchwey to make a very good input,” he said.

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I’ve not picked forms to contest NDC Chairmanship – Kwesi Botchwey https://www.adomonline.com/ive-not-picked-forms-to-contest-ndc-chairmanship-kwesi-botchwey/ Tue, 28 Aug 2018 06:07:05 +0000 http://35.232.176.128/ghana-news/?p=1290811 Professor Kwesi Botchwey has dismissed reports that he has picked forms to contest as National Chairman of the opposition National Democratic Congress [NDC].

A statement from Professor Botchwey’s office said such reports stemmed from “some faceless people” looking to stain Professor Botchwey’s reputation.

“The office of Professor Kwesi Botchwey received with surprise the news being carried by myjoyonline news portal that he has picked a form to contest for the office of National Chairman in the upcoming NDC congress slated for later this year. The office wants to put it on record that, Professor Kwesi Botchwey has not authorised any person to pick a form on his behalf, or has he ever considered contesting for the office of NDC National Chairman.”

READ ALSO: Mahama doesn’t have the discipline to lead NDC – Former Ambassador

His office has said it will investigate the matter “and report this conduct to the National Executive Committee to bring to book the persons behind this desperate conduct.”

The statement however hinted that Professor Botchwey will be serving in some capacity within the NDC as it makes a bid to return to power.

“In the coming days, Professor Kwesi Botchwey shall publicly declare his intention and the capacity in which he will decide to lead the party for victory 2020,” the statement said.

READ ALSO: Marijuana can live in breast milk for up to 6 days, study finds

Find below the full statement

FROM THE OFFICE OF PROFESSOR KWESI BOTCHWEY

27/08/18

The office of Professor Kwesi Botchwey received with surprise the news being carried by myjoyonline news portal that, he has picked a form to contest for the office of National Chairman in the upcoming NDC congress slated for later this year.

The office wants to put it on record that, Professor Kwesi Botchwey has not authorised any person to pick a form on his behalf, or has he ever considered contesting for the office of NDC National Chairman.

We consider this act by some faceless people as desperate, wicked, and devious with the intent of portraying him as inconsistent with his decisions, and a deliberate attempt to create confusion in the mind of his teeming supporters.

The office shall investigate and report this conduct to the National Executive Committee to bring to book the persons behind this desperate conduct to book.

ALSO READ: Gov’t not using taxpayers’ money to build National Cathedral

In the coming days, Professor Kwesi Botchwey shall publicly declare his intention and the capacity in which he will decide to lead the party for victory 2020. We want to assure our teeming supporters that Prof. Kwesi Botchey remains resolute to the agenda agreed on.

‘Broken integrity’ caused NDC’s defeat – Kwesi Botchwey

Professor Kwesi Botchwey, who led the National Democratic Congress’ (NDC) election 2016 fact-finding committee, recently noted that the party’s heavy defeat in the last election was partly due to a “breakdown of integrity.”

Speaking for the first time after submitting the committee’s findings to the NDC leadership, Prof. Botchwey said his committee observed that the breakdown of integrity was evident in the selection of people to various executive positions within the party

He was speaking at the 6th John Evans Atta Mills Commemorative Lecture at the University of Cape Coast in the Central Region.

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It’s official: Mahama will contest NDC flagbearership https://www.adomonline.com/its-official-mahama-will-contest-ndc-flagbearership/ Thu, 23 Aug 2018 12:01:18 +0000 http://35.232.176.128/ghana-news/?p=1283471 The day some National Democratic Congress (NDC) faithful have dreaded is here, former President John Dramani Mahama has officially declared his intention to run for the party’s flagbearership.

Mr Mahama presented his letter of intent at the NDC headquarters at Adabraka in Accra Thursday amid a rousing support from some party faithful.

The party recently asked all party members who hope to run for the flagbearship to present their official declaration of intent to the party ahead of the official opening of nominations.

Eight men have already tendered in their letters. Mr Mahama completed the process by submitting his letter.

2016 Loss

Mahama’s official declaration comes after months of speculation of whether the former President would seek to return to the helm of Ghana politics after the December 7, 2016 election in which he failed his re-election bid.

The governing NDC lost power in an unprecedented fashion. As sitting President, Mr Mahama failed in his bid to secure a second term.

Among other reasons stated in the report were cronyism and misapplication of campaign funds.

Speculations and blame games have gone on even after Prof Botchwey and his committee presented their report.

John Mahama has taken ultimate responsibility for the 2016 loss, even though he points out that he rode a lame horse into the 2016 battle.

Mahama had faced intense pressure from the media and members of the NDC to make his intentions known earlier but he would not break.

The former President insisted the party had suffered a heavy blow after the 2016 loss and making his intentions known would further divide the party.

He would wait until after the processes to heal the party’s wounds were completed before he declared any intention.

Unity Walks

Some of the steps taken by the party to heal such wounds were health walks nicknamed ‘Unity Walk’. These walks ended with some party executives and Mr Mahama addressing participants.

These, the party says galvanised the grassroots and energised them for the battle ahead, the 2020 electioneering period.

Some flagbearer aspirants including Second Deputy Minister of Parliament, Alban Bagbin, however, tagged the Unity Walks as Mahama walks, saying others were met with hostility when they tried participating in the said walks.

Campaign

The other contenders in the race have long made their intentions known to the party faithful. Former Trades Minister, Ekwow Spio Garbrah, who contested and lost to the late Evans Atta-Mills is one of the front-runners.

Nadowli Kaleo MP, Alban Bagbin is also gathering a lot of support as he tours the country to announce his intentions to the party grassroots.

He continues to hit at Mahama’s tenure in office and consistently blames him for the 2016 loss, referring to him as a “reckless driver” who led them into opposition.

Former Vice Chancellor of University of Professional Studies, Joshua Alabi is also on the sheet.

Mahama’s advantage

Scores of analysts have predicted an easy win for Mr Mahama should he run for the flagbearership.

Speaking to Joy News in December 2017, Political Science lecturer at the University of Ghana, Evans Aggrey Darko noted that Mahama would be the man to beat in the race.

“He has served as a Vice-President for four years and served as President for four years so he has built enough political capital within the party to trump all other contenders” he stated.

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AUDIO: Victor Smith tips Kwesi Botchwey as running mate for Mahama https://www.adomonline.com/audio-victor-smith-tips-kwesi-botchwey-as-running-mate-for-mahama/ Sat, 11 Aug 2018 14:18:59 +0000 http://35.232.176.128/ghana-news/?p=1259631

Former High Commissioner to the United Kingdom, Emmanuel Victor Smith is tipping a former Minister of Finance Prof Kwesi Botchwey as the running mate for ex-president John Mahama if the latter becomes the flagbearer of the National Democratic Congress.

He says Professor Botwey, Ghana’s longest-serving finance minister is capable of managing the economy if given the nod.

“If I should advise Mahama on whom to pick as a running mate, I would recommend Dr Kwesi Botchwey because he understands the economy. He managed the economy well, he is respected finance minister,” he said.

READ: Journalists flee as soldiers disrupt anti-Bukari rally at Bolgatanga

Prof. Botchwey is believed to be fast catching the ‘eyes’ of the NDC founder Jerry John Rawlings as a preferred candidate.

Some aspirants who have announced their bids to contest include Second Deputy Speaker of Parliament, Alban K.S. Bagbin; former NHIS boss, Sylvester Mensah and former Trade and Industry Minister, Ekwow Spio-Garbrah.

READ MORE; Akufo-Addo should have resigned honourably over AMERI renegotiated deal – Tawiah Boateng

Others include former UPSA Rector, Joshua Alabi and Kweku Rickett Hagan, former Central Regional Minister.

Speaking on Asempa FM’s Ekosii Sen Thursday, Ambassador Smith believes John Mahama is the best person who can lead the party to victory in 2020, and by extension, Prof Kwesi Botchwey will best fit as the best running mate for Mahama.

LISTEN: AUDIO: Akufo-Addo promises to complete 41-year-old KATH maternity building

“Normally every President sees the role of a finance minister as the best manager to the economy and so being Mahama’s VICE won’t be a bad option for him. Kwesi Botchwey has achieved so much and with his credentials, he will be the person to support Mahama to bring us [NDC] victory” he noted.

 

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Absence of honesty, integrity led to NDC defeat in 2016 – Prof Botchwey https://www.adomonline.com/absence-of-honesty-integrity-led-to-ndc-defeat-in-2016-prof-botchwey/ Mon, 30 Jul 2018 18:30:57 +0000 http://35.232.176.128/ghana-news/?p=1236481 Former Finance Minister Prof Kwasi Botchwey says the absence of decency, honesty and integrity which sum up what ethical politics is about were the reason for the defeat of the National Democratic Congress in the 2016 elections.

Speaking at the 6th Atta Mills commemorative lecture, the longest serving Finance Minister in the country’s history said, the issue about ethical politics are as important in internal party politics as they are in the national discourse.

In what may perhaps be his first public utterance after leading a committee to investigate the cause of the NDC’s humiliating defeat in the 2016 elections, Prof Botchwey said bitterness, integrity defects in the appointments of party executives and a general absence of ethical politics contributed to the party’s defeat.

READ: Police man kills 3 robbers, 4 escape with gunshot wounds

He was quick to add that the party is working feverishly to restore ethicality in its organizational set-up.

Prof Kwesi Botchwey was speaking on the theme: “Ethicality democracy and national development; the legacy of President Atta Mills.”

A classmate and friend to Atta Mills, a person with whom he shared a common passion, Prof Botchwey spoke fondly and highly of the late president who passed away on July 24, 2012 after a short illness.

He said the late president John Mills was a symbol of ethicality- honesty, humility and decency- who pledged to be guided always by making the right decision and not a hasty one.

These values he said must be expressed and exhibited at all times if the country will develop through democracy.

READ: Gov’t to meet doctors to avert strike

“There is a relationship between democracy and economic development,” he stated, adding, many policies of national development, policy formulation and taxation need cross-partisan support even when there is the dominant party in parliament.

He said in assessing the risk of their investment decisions, investors use the ability of opposition parties in parliament to cripple government’s policy and challenged leaders, especially those in government to be able to consult widely on issues of mutual interest and national development.

Seed of debilitating conflict

Prof Botchwey expressed worry over what he said is the increasing polarization of the country’s politics, a development, he said has caught the attention of the clergy, professionals and other stakeholders.

READ: Rejected Berekum DCE chases assembly members for ‘bribe’ cash (AUDIO)

He stated the country is slowly sowing the seed of debilitating conflict if it does not do something about the polarized country.

“We need to step back from the brink and begin to ethicalize by curbing the case of vengeance and recrimination,” he stated.

IFrame

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Amissah-Arthur to be buried at Military Cemetery https://www.adomonline.com/amissah-arthur-to-be-buried-at-military-cemetery/ Fri, 20 Jul 2018 17:17:40 +0000 http://35.232.176.128/ghana-news/?p=1220981 The family of the late Vice President Kwesi Amissah Arthur has announced that the former vice president will be buried at the military cemetery at Burma Camp in Accra.

Mr. Amissah Arthur’s mortal remains will be laid in state at the foyer of the Accra International Conference Centre for filing past by the general public on Thursday 26th July, and burial service held on Friday 27th July after which he will be laid to rest.

The former vice president passed away at age 67 on the 29th of June 2018.

READ: HOT VIDEO: Policeman beats woman mercilessly in a bank
He collapsed at the Air Force Gym in Accra during a workout and was rushed to the 37 Military Hospital where he was pronounced dead.

Profile

Born on April 29, 1951, Mr Kwesi Bekoe Amissah-Arthur was an economist, academic and politician.

He was the sixth Vice-President of Ghana. He held office from August 6, 2012, until January 7, 2017, under President John Dramani Mahama.

He was also the Governor of the Bank of Ghana from 2009 to 2012.

Mr Amissah-Arthur was sworn in as Vice-President on August 6, 2012 after he was nominated by President John Dramani Mahama to be the Vice-President, a week after President Mahama had also been sworn in as President, following the sudden death of President John Evans Atta Mills on July 24, 2012.

READ: PHOTOS: Meet the policeman who assaulted a nursing mother

Mr Amissah-Arthur was a research assistant at the Institute of Statistical, Social and Economic Research between 1974 and 1975.

Later, he joined the Economics Department as a teaching assistant from 1977 to 1978, moving on to become an assistant lecturer in 1979. He also lectured at the Department of Economics at the University of Ghana between 1980 and 1988; and again at the Department of Economics, Anambra State College of Education, Awka, Anambra State, Nigeria (August 1981 – July 1983).

He worked as a consultant for the World Bank in The Gambia and as a consultant for the Netherlands’ government education project in Ghana.

Mr Amissah-Arthur also worked as Senior Economist for the Sigma One Corporation in Ghana between 1998 and 2000, and between 2001 and 2002, he was on assignment for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Denmark.

READ: AUDIO: VAT Increment: NDC must bow their heads in shame – Masloc Boss

Political life

From 1983 to 1986, Amissah-Arthur served as a special assistant to the Secretary of Finance and Economic Planning, Prof. Kwesi Botchwey, in the Provisional National Defence Council (PNDC) government.

He subsequently was appointed the Deputy Secretary of Finance in the PNDC government from February 1986 to March 1993, and later became the Deputy Minister of Finance in the Rawlings-led NDC government.

In October 2009, Mr Amissah-Arthur was appointed the Governor of the Bank of Ghana by President John Evans Atta Mills. He held this position until August 6, 2012, when he became Vice-President of Ghana after the death of President Atta Mills.

He continued as Vice President when President Mahama won the 2012 election.

Mr Amissah-Arthur was married to Matilda Amissah-Arthur with whom he had two children. He was a Christian and member of the Calvary Methodist Church at Adabraka in Accra.

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Mahama’s political greenhorns caused our defeat – Bagbin https://www.adomonline.com/mahamas-political-greenhorns-caused-our-defeat-bagbin-2/ Wed, 18 Jul 2018 13:31:55 +0000 http://35.232.176.128/ghana-news/?p=1215091 Mr Alban Kingsford Sumana Bagbin, Second Deputy Speaker of Ghana’s Parliament has partly attributed the electoral defeat of the National Democratic Congress in 2016 to President Mahama’s decision to surround himself with political greenhorns.

Speaking in an exclusive interview with the Ghana News Agency, the Nadowli/Kaleo Legislator likened former President John Dramani Mahama to a sheep that had led a pride of lions to defeat.

WATCH VIDEO: Stop behaving like “tin god”- Ken Agyapong blasts Kweku Baako

A sheep had led a pride of NDC lions into defeat because the President had surrounded himself with disrespectful political greenhorns who insulted everybody and cut him off from the leadership of the party”, he said.

I am sure you know – “when a sheep leads lions into battle, they will be defeated, but when a lion leads sheep into battle, they win’,” Mr Bagbin added.

Former President Mahama had led the country without the party. The evidence is clear, even our respected founder who is revered even by our opponents was eventually estranged from his own baby. Ask yourself, what could ever make a mother abandon her own child? It should tell you that President Rawlings was really pushed away,” Mr Bagbin said.

ALSO READ: 3 of Manso ‘armed robbers’ my campaign team members -Asokore MCE (AUDIO)

He said the NDC failed woefully in power under Mahama because the government which had abandoned the party, had also abandoned the pillars of politics.

The pillars of politics, he said included the media, technocrats and the party itself as the mothership that were woefully abandoned to their fate.

As a party, we have been so unfair to our own media. My heart bleeds that we had been in power for eight years and it was under our reign that our own newspapers, such as The Enquirer and the Palaver collapsed.

Today, where is The Republic, where is The Ghanaians Voice? Even Montie is struggling to come back on air. We were in power for eight years and we did nothing to build our own mouthpiece. But in modern-day politics, the media is everything because every political party has good plans and works hard to achieve them; but while on it the people must see the genuine efforts even if results are hard to come by. Without the media, how do you get the people to appreciate your effort?”

ALSO READ: No VAT increases in mid-year budget review

Mr Bagbin said, one of the woes of the NDC was allowing the NPP to capture and control the media landscape and that it was even more in their alleged disappointing performance.

“It is not that we do not have technocrats in the NDC, we have, but the NPP attracts more. And even the ones that we have, we are pushing them away because we think politics is a matter of charity.”

Mr Bagbin said the party should change the mind-set of their faithful as the solution to the myriad mistakes that made the party unpopular in 2016 polls.

We must first and foremost be clear in our minds that politics is not only about sacrifice; people who sacrifice must benefit when the opportunities come around. Therefore we must build our media, empower them also to become empires like our opponents have done with theirs. We must put in place measures for technocrats to feel welcomed in our party and we must make our own party sustainable in these turbulent seas called politics.

“We must also not forget our grassroots; you are an ingrate to ride on their support and sacrifices into office and then when you get there you abandon them and say you are father for all,” he added.

He said efforts were underway to put the party back on a winsome footing and that could be achieved only when the party hierarchy respected the recommendations of the Professor Kwesi Botchwey recommendations.

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Mahama’s political greenhorns caused our defeat – Bagbin https://www.adomonline.com/mahamas-political-greenhorns-caused-our-defeat-bagbin/ https://www.adomonline.com/mahamas-political-greenhorns-caused-our-defeat-bagbin/#comments Wed, 18 Jul 2018 06:10:54 +0000 http://35.232.176.128/ghana-news/?p=1213921 Second Deputy Speaker of Parliament, Alban Kingsford Sumana Bagbin, has partly attributed the electoral defeat of the National Democratic Congress in 2016 to President Mahama who allegedly surrounded himself with political greenhorns.

He said: A sheep had led a pride of NDC lions into defeat because the President had surrounded himself with disrespectful political greenhorns who insulted everybody and cut him off from the leadership of the party.”

Speaking in an exclusive interview with the Ghana News Agency after making some allegations on an Accra-based Radio station, the Nadowli/Kaleo Legislator likened former President John Dramani Mahama to a sheep that had led a pride of lions to a crushing defeat in the 2016 general election.

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“I am sure you know – ‘when a sheep leads lions into battle, they will be defeated, but when a lion leads sheep into battle, they win’,” Mr Bagbin said in an exclusive interview with the Ghana News Agency.

“Former President Mahama had led the country without the party. The evidence is clear, even our respected founder who is revered even by our opponents was eventually estranged from his own baby. Ask yourself, what could ever make a mother abandon her own child? It should tell you that President Rawlings was really pushed away,” Mr Bagbin said.

He said the NDC failed woefully in power under Mahama because the government which had abandoned the party, had also abandoned the pillars of politics.

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The pillars of politics, he said included; the media, technocrats and the party itself as the mothership that was woefully abandoned to their fate.

“As a party, we have been so unfair to our own media. My heart bleeds that we had been in power for eight years and it was under our reign that our own newspapers, such as The Enquirer and the Palaver collapsed.

“Today, where is The Republic, where is The Ghanaians Voice? Even Montie is struggling to come back on air. We were in power for eight years and we did nothing to build our own mouthpiece. But in modern-day politics, the media is everything because every political party has good plans and works hard to achieve them; but while on it the people must see the genuine efforts even if results are hard to come by. Without the media, how do you get the people to appreciate your effort?”

Mr Bagbin said, one of the woes of the NDC was because it allowed the NPP to capture and control the media landscape and that it was even more in their alleged disappointing performance.

“It is not that we do not have technocrats in the NDC, we have, but the NPP attracts more. And even the ones that we have, we are pushing them away because we think politics is a matter of charity.”

Mr Bagbin said the party should change the mindset of their faith as the solution to the myriad mistakes that made the party unpopular in 2016 polls.

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“We must first and foremost be clear in our minds that politics is not only about sacrifice; people who sacrifice must benefit when the opportunities come around. Therefore we must build our media, empower them also to become empires like our opponents have done with theirs. We must put in place measures for technocrats to feel welcomed in our party and we must make our own party sustainable in these turbulent seas called politics.

“We must also not forget our grassroots; you are an ingrate to ride on their support and sacrifices into office and then when you get there you abandon them and say you are father for all,” he added.

He said efforts were underway to put the party back on a winsome footing and that could be achieved only when the party hierarchy respected the recommendations of the Professor Kwesi Botchwey recommendations.

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Funeral rites for late Amissah-Arthur announced https://www.adomonline.com/funeral-rites-for-late-amissah-arthur-announced/ Fri, 13 Jul 2018 08:01:15 +0000 http://35.232.176.128/ghana-news/?p=1207761 The final funeral rites of the late former Vice President, Paa Kwesi Bekoe Amissah-Arthur, have been announced by his family. Mr. Amissah-Arthur will be laid in state on Thursday, 26th July 2018 from 8:00am to 6:00pm.

his will be followed by a burial service which will be held at the Accra International Conference Centre (AICC) in Accra on Friday, 27th July 2018.

The interment for Mr. Amissah Arthur will however be by special invitation.

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A thanksgiving service is expected to be held on Sunday 29th July 2018 at the Calvary Methodist Church in Accra.

Former Vice President, Kwesi Amissah-Arthur died on Friday morning at age 67. He collapsed at the Air Force Gym in Accra during a workout and was rushed to the 37 Military Hospital where he was pronounced dead.

Profile

Born on April 29, 1951, Mr Kwesi Bekoe Amissah-Arthur was an economist, academic and politician.

He was the sixth Vice-President of Ghana. He held office from August 6, 2012, until January 7, 2017, under President John Dramani Mahama.

He was also the Governor of the Bank of Ghana from 2009 to 2012.

Mr Amissah-Arthur was sworn in as Vice-President on August 6, 2012 after he was nominated by President John Dramani Mahama to be the Vice-President, a week after President Mahama had also been sworn in as President, following the sudden death of President John Evans Atta Mills on July 24, 2012.

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Mr Amissah-Arthur was a research assistant at the Institute of Statistical, Social and Economic Research between 1974 and 1975.

Later, he joined the Economics Department as a teaching assistant from 1977 to 1978, moving on to become an assistant lecturer in 1979. He also lectured at the Department of Economics at the University of Ghana between 1980 and 1988; and again at the Department of Economics, Anambra State College of Education, Awka, Anambra State, Nigeria (August 1981 – July 1983).

He worked as a consultant for the World Bank in The Gambia and as a consultant for the Netherlands’ government education project in Ghana.

Mr Amissah-Arthur also worked as Senior Economist for the Sigma One Corporation in Ghana between 1998 and 2000, and between 2001 and 2002, he was on assignment for the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Denmark.

Political life

From 1983 to 1986, Amissah-Arthur served as a special assistant to the Secretary of Finance and Economic Planning, Prof. Kwesi Botchwey, in the Provisional National Defence Council (PNDC) government.

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He subsequently was appointed the Deputy Secretary of Finance in the PNDC government from February 1986 to March 1993, and later became the Deputy Minister of Finance in the Rawlings-led NDC government.

In October 2009, Mr Amissah-Arthur was appointed the Governor of the Bank of Ghana by President John Evans Atta Mills. He held this position until August 6, 2012, when he became Vice-President of Ghana after the death of President Atta Mills.

He continued as Vice President when President Mahama won the 2012 election.

Mr Amissah-Arthur was married to Matilda Amissah-Arthur with whom he had two children. He was a Christian and member of the Calvary Methodist Church at Adabraka in Accra.

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Video: ‘He died too young’ – MPs mourn Amissah-Arthur’s death https://www.adomonline.com/video-he-died-too-young-mps-mourn-amissah-arthurs-death/ Mon, 02 Jul 2018 09:51:11 +0000 http://35.232.176.128/ghana-news/?p=1185831

Parliament on Saturday paid glowing tribute to former Vice President, Paa Kwesi Amissah-Arthur, who passed away on Friday.

Mr. Amissah-Arthur reportedly collapsed at the Air Force Gym early Friday and was rushed to the 37 Military Hospital where he was pronounced dead.

READ: Mahama commiserates with Amissah-Arthur family, signs book of condolence

The Speaker, Prof Mike Ocquaye, led the tributes at the Legislature, revealing that he knew the former Vice President from his days as a lecturer at the University of Ghana and later as the personal assistant to the former Minister of Finance, Dr Kwesi Botchwey.

Amissah Arthur

Photo: Amissah-Arthur

Minority Chief Whip, Muntaka Mubarak, said the sudden death of the former vice president was a great shock.

“Looking at our health facility and the way we take good care of ourselves today, I think [at] 67 years, he died too young,” he said.

ALSO READ: Don’t ride on Amissah-Arthur’s death for fame – Ghanaians warn prophets

He said their prayers are with the family and expressed the hope that the family would cope with the passing of the former president.

A minute’s silence was observed in the honour of the late former President.

Watch more in the video above.

 

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Kwesi Botchwey will not contest NDC flagbearership race – Spokesperson https://www.adomonline.com/kwesi-botchwey-will-not-contest-ndc-flagbearership-race-spokesperson/ https://www.adomonline.com/kwesi-botchwey-will-not-contest-ndc-flagbearership-race-spokesperson/#comments Mon, 04 Jun 2018 17:49:37 +0000 http://35.232.176.128/ghana-news/?p=1147531 Prof Kwesi Botchwey Ghana’s longest serving Finance Minister will not be running for the opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC) Flagbearership race for the 2020 elections.

There have been reports that the experienced Economist will make a strong case for the 2020 presidential slot of the party.

Senior NDC cadres, some party Regional Chairmen and former MPs who support his bid are said to be putting pressure on him to step forward. They are of the firm believe that Prof. Botchwey’s economic prowess and credentials, his cross-sectional appeal and unblemished track record will be ‘great assets’ for the party.

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Pollster Ben Ephson has stated that Prof. Kwesi Botchwey will be a serious threat to former President John Dramani Mahama’s ambition of a comeback if he [Prof. Botchwey] decides to contest the flagbearership slot of the party.

But speaking in an interview on Kasapa FM, a close source of Prof. Botchwey who spoke on condition of anonymity indicated that though the Professor has been approached by some party stalwarts, he has declined to heed to their request.

According to the impeccable source, Prof Botchwey is more interested in ensuring that the Party is able to address the issues that caused its humiliating defeat in the 2016 general elections and make the NDC formidable and a winning machine for the crucial 2020 elections.

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“It obvious that the good professor would have been a perfect candidate for the NDC if he’d agreed to contest and would have made the party’s return to power in 2021 easy. But he’s no looking in that direction, he loves the NDC and his preoccupation now is to build the party and see it holding together very strongly.” the source added.

Second deputy Speaker of Parliament Alban Bagbin, the former Vice–Chancellor of the University of Professional Studies, (UPSA) Joshua Alabi and former NHIA CEO Sylvester Mensah are some of the stalwarts in the NDC who have declared their intention to contest the flagbearership slot of the party.

Former President Mahama a fortnight ago also stated his intention to lead the party ahead of the 2020 elections after reflecting on several calls on him to contest.

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