News
The ORAL Lies – Ing. Kwame A. Prempeh

For those that fell for and still believe in the ORAL lies, let me help put things into perspective.
- US$21.19 billion is about the same amount as the entire 2025 budget.
The direct wage bill for the public sector for 2025 is less than 6.5b usd.
Our entire budget for capital expenditure in 2025 is less than 3 billion usd.
So imagine what US$ 21.19 billion is.
- This amount is roughly one fifth of our expenditure over the last 8 years.
So it is absurd and ridiculous to suggest that, that amount has been stolen and went into some individuals pockets and can and will be recovered.
If you still believe that is possible, then let’s look at a couple of the 38 cases that Okudjeto presented.
A. Bank of Ghana Head office – US$ 222.7
How is the entire construction cost of a project that is duly delivered and in use be recoverable because you think the amount was inflated?
B. GHS80 billion (about US$7 billion) from BOG. money they claim was printed to support Government business. The accusation is not that this was misappropriated, but that it required parliamentary approval. So how do you recover it?
Mind you the same Okudjeto accepted non Ghanaian deportees from US without parliamentary approval.
C. Then there is PDS, US$190 million.
The funny thing about this one is that, they claim GHS1 billion of money collected by PDS is unaccounted for. However, ORAL is not interested in that. They rather want to recover the US$190 million grant that was forfeited.
Yes, you read it right. We are talking about money that was never given to Ghana. The US cancelled the compact because the PDS deal did not go through.
D. Pullman tax waiver. US$ 23.9 million.
Silly, this one.
No law was broken and the request went through the proper process and received parliamentary approval.
Not agreeing with it does not make it recoverable. If that is the case then we can start with recovering the waivers giving to Dzata cement or the US$832 million to MPS by NDC.
In any case, the pullman project has stalled, so most likely, they have not utilised the entire waiver. So it is impossible to recover the amount that ORAL is claiming.
So fellow Ghanaians, these were the Anansi stories sold to us by Okudzeto Ablakwa and his committee.
News
REVITALIZATION OF ATWIMA NWABIAGYA SOUTH CONSTITUENCY – DENNIS FOUNDATION TO THE RESCUE
News
PRESIDENT BIDEN VOWS TO BANISH UGANDA, GABON, NIGER, AND CENTRAL AFRICAN REPUBLIC FROM THE AGOA TRADE DEAL
credit: Gloria Aradi (BBC News)
US President Joe Biden has revealed plans to expel Uganda, Gabon, Niger and the Central African Republic (CAR) from a special US-Africa trade program.
The countries were either involved in “gross violations” of human rights or not making progress towards democratic rule, the President stated. Burkina Faso, Mali, and Guinea have all previously been expelled from AGOA after military coups in those countries.
The US introduced the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA) in 2000.
It gives eligible sub-Saharan African countries duty-free access to the US for more than 1,800 products.
President Biden said that Niger and Gabon – both of which are currently under military rule following coups this year – are ineligible for AGOA because they “have not established, or are not making continual progress toward establishing the protection of political pluralism and the rule of law”.
He also said that the removal of the CAR and Uganda from the program was due to “gross violations of internationally recognized human rights” by their governments.
In May, the US government had said it was considering removing Uganda from AGOA and introducing sanctions on the country after it passed a controversial anti-homosexuality law.
The law, which imposes a death penalty on people found guilty of engaging in certain same-sex acts, has faced global criticism.
“Despite intensive engagement between the United States and the Central African Republic, Gabon, Niger, and Uganda, these countries have failed to address United States concerns about their non-compliance with the AGOA eligibility criteria,” President Biden said on Monday, in a letter addressed to the speaker of the US House of Representatives.
The four countries are yet to react to the announcement, which comes just before South Africa is due to host the 20th AGOA forum from Thursday this week.
Their expulsion from AGOA is set to take effect from the start of next year and is likely to impact their economies, as AGOA has been credited with promoting exports, economic growth, and job creation among participating countries.
CAR is likely to be the least impacted by the AGOA expulsion, as it only recorded $881,000 (£722,300) in US exports in 2022, according to US government data.
The country, however, imported goods worth $23m from the US in the same year, creating a massive trade deficit between the two countries.
US data also show that Uganda exported goods worth $174m to the US last year, while Gabon and Niger recorded US exports of $220m and $73m respectively in the same period.
Last month, Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni said that several American companies had already stopped importing textiles – which fall under the Agoa trade deal – from Uganda because of the passing of the anti-homosexuality law.
“The homosexuals in the US are interfering with our export of textiles. Some of the orders have been canceled there,” Mr Museveni was quoted as saying by the privately owned Daily Monitor newspaper.
In August, Mr Museveni banned the importation of second-hand clothes, a move thought to target the US, which is a major supplier of used garments to Uganda and other African countries.
The threat to exclude Niger and Gabon from AGOA is the latest US government action against the two junta-led countries.
The US State Department announced last week that it had suspended most foreign aid to Gabon and would only resume assistance if Gabon’s transitional government establishes democratic rule.
In August, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken announced a similar measure against Niger, saying that the US “is pausing certain foreign assistance programs benefitting the government of Niger”.
News
President Biden Vows to Banish Uganda, Gabon, Niger, and CAR from the AGOA Trade Deal

President Joseph R. Biden, USA.
(image credit: Newsweek.com)
credit: Gloria Aradi (BBC News)
US President Joe Biden has revealed plans to expel Uganda, Gabon, Niger, and the Central African Republic (CAR) from a special US-Africa trade program. Burkina Faso, Mali, and Guinea have all previously been expelled from the African Growth and Opportunity Act (Agoa) after military coups in those countries.
The countries were either involved in “gross violations” of human rights or not making progress towards democratic rule, the President argued.
The US introduced the African Growth and Opportunity Act (Agoa) in 2000.
It gives eligible sub-Saharan African countries duty-free access to the US for more than 1,800 products.
President Biden said that Niger and Gabon – both of which are currently under military rule following coups this year – are ineligible for Agoa because they “have not established, or are not making continual progress toward establishing the protection of political pluralism and the rule of law”.
He also said that the removal of the CAR and Uganda from the program was due to “gross violations of internationally recognized human rights” by their governments.
In May, the US government had said it was considering removing Uganda from Agoa and introducing sanctions on the country after it passed a controversial anti-homosexuality law.
The law, which imposes a death penalty on people found guilty of engaging in certain same-sex acts, has faced global criticism.
“Despite intensive engagement between the United States and the Central African Republic, Gabon, Niger, and Uganda, these countries have failed to address United States concerns about their non-compliance with the Agoa eligibility criteria,” President Biden said on Monday, in a letter addressed to the speaker of the US House of Representatives.
The four countries are yet to react to the announcement, which comes just before South Africa is due to host the 20th Agoa forum from Thursday this week.
Their expulsion from Agoa is set to take effect from the start of next year and is likely to impact their economies, as Agoa has been credited with promoting exports, economic growth, and job creation among participating countries.
CAR is likely to be the least impacted by the Agoa expulsion, as it only recorded $881,000 (£722,300) in US exports in 2022, according to US government data.
The country, however, imported goods worth $23m from the US in the same year, creating a massive trade deficit between the two countries.
US data also show that Uganda exported goods worth $174m to the US last year, while Gabon and Niger recorded US exports of $220m and $73m respectively in the same period.
Last month, Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni said that several American companies had already stopped importing textiles – which fall under the Agoa trade deal – from Uganda because of the passing of the anti-homosexuality law.
“The homosexuals in the US are interfering with our export of textiles. Some of the orders have been canceled there,” Mr. Museveni was quoted as saying by the privately owned Daily Monitor newspaper.
In August, Mr Museveni banned the importation of second-hand clothes, a move thought to target the US, which is a major supplier of used garments to Uganda and other African countries.
The threat to exclude Niger and Gabon from Agoa is the latest US government action against the two junta-led countries.
The US State Department announced last week that it had suspended most foreign aid to Gabon and would only resume assistance if Gabon’s transitional government establishes democratic rule.
In August, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken announced a similar measure against Niger, saying that the US “is pausing certain foreign assistance programs benefitting the government of Niger”.
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