The ritual of the Public Accounts Committee (PAC) has become a grand theatre of the absurd, a choreographed dance of indignation that yields nothing but the dust of forgotten files.
For decades, Ghana has clung to the Westminster model of parliamentary oversight, believing that the mere airing of grievances in a televised room constitutes accountability.
We have built the shell of a watchtower, but the guards are sleeping, and the gates are wide open.
The tragedy of the Ghanaian condition is that we have mistaken activity for achievement. We watch the PAC sittings like a national soap opera, finding catharsis in the sharp tongue of a legislator, yet we ignore the fact that not a single soul is wearing handcuffs at the end of the season.
This is the definition of a failed state mechanism. When the state’s primary tool for fiscal discipline is reduced to a “naming and shaming” exercise, the shameless naturally thrive. In a climate where corruption has moved from the periphery to the very marrow of governance, shame is a blunt instrument. We need the sharp edge of the law.
Linking audit reports directly to criminal investigation and prosecution is the only path to national restoration.
The Auditor-General’s findings are not merely “observations”; they are forensic footprints of a crime scene. To hand these findings to a political committee is to invite partisanship to dilute justice.
Instead, the moment an audit reveals a misappropriation of funds, the machinery of the Economic and Organised Crime Office (EOCO) and the Office of the Special Prosecutor should be triggered automatically. The transition from the audit sheet to the courtroom must be seamless, mechanical, and merciless.
The constitutional clarity we seek is simple: the public purse is not a buffet for the well-connected. If a public official cannot account for the widow’s mite, they should not be explaining themselves to a committee of their peers; they should be defending their liberty before a judge.
We must stop pretending that administrative “recommendations” can cure systemic larceny. A thief does not need a recommendation to do better; a thief needs a sentence. By entrenching a model of prosecution, we transform the Auditor-General from a toothless chronicler of loss into a herald of justice. We move from a culture of explanation to a culture of consequence.
The Westminster model served a society where honour was a functional constraint; in a society where the appetite for illicit wealth has eclipsed the fear of God and State, we must rely on the cell block, not the committee room. The sun is setting on the era of the talk-shop.
Every cedi lost to “irregularities” is a bed missing in a hospital, a roof missing from a school, and a future stolen from a child. We can no longer afford the luxury of isomorphic mimicry. We must build a system that breathes, that bites, and that binds.
Let the audit report be the trigger, let the investigation be the process, and let the prison gates be the final destination for those who trade the national interest for personal gain.
If we do not link the audit to the shackles, we are merely documenting our own demise. The choice is clear: we either prosecute the corrupt, or we perish by their hand.
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