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General News of Saturday, 12 October 2019

    

Source: ghananewsagency.org

Rise in corruption a major cause of unemployment - CHRAJ

Commission on Human Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ) Commission on Human Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ)

The Commission on Human Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ) has expressed concern over the rise in corruption in the country saying it is having an effect on the country’s employment rate and development.

The Commission said the falsification of people’s ages and documents coupled with numerous abandoned government projects are some corrupt acts and actions that are denying competent and qualified graduates the opportunity for employment.

Mr Godfrey Ebo Arhin, a Senior Investigator at the Greater Accra Regional Office of CHRAJ, said this while addressing students of the African University College of Communications (AUCC) on Thursday.

The event was held under the theme: “Enhancing public accountability and environmental governance”.

The forum, organised by the Greater Accra Regional Directorate of National Commission Civic Education (NCCE), was to empower citizens to demand accountability from duty bearers to enable them to report all acts of corruption to appropriate authorities.

“Just a few years ago there was a whole association of graduate unemployment, which means we have young men and women who have left school, qualified but are not getting work to do. The reason is that there are a lot of people in organizations who are due for retirement but because they have falsified their ages they are yet to depart from the organisation. This is stalling the chance of those who have the competence and the needed qualifications to be in such positions”, Mr Arhin said.

“Again, we have so many government projects which have been abandoned in the villages, communities which when completed will have provided employment for these people or the money could have been channeled into different job creation ventures and other developmental projects to facilitate development but all have been wasted”, he said.

Mr Arhin called on the public to take advantage of the available anti-corruption Acts to help ‘nip the canker in the bud’.

Acts such as the Economic and Organised Crime Office Act, 2010 (Act 804), the Whistleblowers Act 2006, (Act 720) and the Office of the Special Prosecutor Act 2017, (Act 959), among others, had all been enacted to help combat the canker, he said.