Surcharge public officials awarded GETFund scholarships – GRASAG
3 min read
The Graduate Students Association of Ghana
(GRASAG) has said it is dismayed by the abuse of discretionary powers of the
Board of the Ghana Education Trust Fund (GETFund) Secretariat which has
culminated in the award of scholarships to undeserving people in society.
The key objective of the GETFund is to provide financial
support (scholarship) for needy students as stated by the Section 2 (2b) of Act
581. Section 2, Clause (b) states that: ‘GETFund is to provide supplementary
funding to the Scholarship Secretariat for the grant of scholarships of gifted
but needy students for studies in the second cycle and accredited tertiary
institutions in Ghana’.
However, GRASAG said persons of influence and individuals
with much political exposure have hijacked this important objective of the
Secretariat at the expense of the poor taxpayer on whose behalf the fund was
established.
This comes after it was revealed that top government
officials like Education Minister Dr Mathew Opoku Prempeh, Procurement Minister
Sarah Adwoa Safo, NaCCA boss Dr Prince Armah, among a host of others, have
benefited from GETFund awards from 2012 to date.
Reacting to this revelation, GRASAG, in a statement, said
there is enormous evidence that many brilliant-but-poor students are denied
scholarships because they lack political connections.
“It is really unconscionable that sitting Members of
Parliament and other public officials will even put themselves up to be
considered for scholarship meant for needy students. This is the evidence of
impunity with which the political class has carefully been orchestrating
against the masses in this country,” GRASAG stated.
“To the extent that these public officials did not go through
any robust competitive selection process before receiving their scholarships is
enough grounds to ask them to refund the said amount and we call on the
attorney general and the office of the special prosecutor to investigate the
circumstances that resulted in this malicious abuse of office by these public
officials,” the statement added.
The graduate students say there is something untoward about
how GETFund awarded scholarships to politically-exposed individuals rather than
brilliant-but-needy students as anticipated by Act 581 to study abroad, in
subjects and programmes that can be handled by the many accredited tertiary
institutions in Ghana.
It said allowing GETFund to continue awarding scholarships
without recourse to the Scholarships Secretariat amounts to the duplicity of
functions and must be curtailed to the barest minimum.
GRASAG noted that it is following the issue keenly and will
not relent on its push for reforms until it has seen reforms in the
administration of scholarships in the country.
In the group’s view, public funds must not be used for the
benefit of a few individuals with political connection and influence while the
masses wallow in abject poverty and uncertainties.
“At this point, GRASAG stands by the recommendations of the
Auditor- General for GETFund to abide by Section 2 (2b) of the GETFund Act and
give funds to Scholarships Secretariat for the administration of local
scholarships and desist from administering foreign scholarships. We also call
for the prosecution and sanctioning of public officials, both past and present,
who have, unfairly, benefited from scholarships meant for brilliant-but-needy
students as well as officials who approved these scholarships.”