The Executive Director of Transparency International Ghana (TI Ghana), Mrs Mary Awelana Addah, has issued a call for the National Democratic Congress (NDC) and state investigative bodies to move beyond rhetoric and apply “harsh and deterrent” punishments to those involved in the Ayawaso East vote-buying scandal.
Speaking on JoyFM’s SMS programme today, Tuesday, 10th February 2026, Mrs Addah warned that Ghana is losing the fight against a “disastrous canker” that has been allowed to degenerate due to years of unheeded warnings.
Her comments follow the fallout from the Saturday primary, where the distribution of television sets and other inducements led to the high-profile recall of Baba Jamal from his diplomatic post as Ghana’s High Commissioner for Nigeria by President John Mahama.
Mrs Addah argued that the credibility of the democratic process now rests on the “signalling” sent by both the party and the judiciary.
While acknowledging the complexities of proving bribery “beyond reasonable doubt” in a court of law, the TI Ghana boss insisted that political parties have the absolute mandate to sanitize their own internal processes. She urged the NDC to use its power to decide who is fit to represent the brand.
“The party decides who is qualified to participate in an election, and so the party can also decide who does not represent them… It is high time they put in place very stringent measures… and ensure that people are punished at that level,” Mrs Addah asserted.
She threw her full weight behind the Parliamentary caucus’s recommendation to annul the Ayawaso East election, stressing that those who engaged in criminal offences must be barred from proceeding further in the political process.
Beyond immediate punishments, Mrs Addah called for a total review of Ghana’s political financing laws. She described the current system as a “box-ticking exercise” that fails to address the root cause of monetization.
TI Ghana’s Blueprint for Financial Integrity:
- Mandatory Declarations: Implementing UN-adopted resolutions that require candidates to declare the exact sources of their campaign funding.
- Campaign Limits: Establishing a strict regime to limit the duration and expenditure of campaigns to prevent the “permanent election” cycle.
- Empowered Law Enforcement: Demanding that the Police and the Office of the Special Prosecutor (OSP) act decisively on the “evidence picked around” during the primary.
Addressing the role of the courts, Mrs Addah noted that while TI Ghana respects the justice process and the principle of fairness, the judiciary must not ignore the clear evidence of “naked bribery” that has become a public spectacle.
“We believe in the justice process, but the justice process should show fairness and show that when there is evidence, this evidence must be taken into account… we have a disastrous canker that is incrementally ensuring that we are losing this fight,” she warned.
The intervention by Transparency International adds significant weight to the growing coalition of civil society organisations—including IMANI Africa and OccupyGhana—demanding that the Ayawaso East incident serves as the final straw for electoral corruption in Ghana.
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Source: www.myjoyonline.com
