The Programmes
Manager of Youth Empowerment for Life (YEfL) Salifu Mahama has cautioned the
Ghanaian youth not to bank all their hopes on GYEEDA, but rather should focus
on developing their own businesses since entrepreneurship has proven to be a
true path to self-sufficiency and wealth creation.
He said GYEEDA which could have been the best antidote
to youth unemployment in the country failed due to lack of proper scrutiny to
ascertain the capacity and capabilities of individuals and companies who were
awarded contracts to execute some of its models.
According to him, until something good is done now about
GYEEDA by way of rigorous restructuring and overhauling, the youth should be
less hopeful of anything offered by the agency.
“The way forward for the Ghanaian youth today is
entrepreneurship. You just count ten of the world’s richest people and you’ll
notice that none of them is an employee. If you come to Ghana, it’s the same
thing….all the rich people in Ghana are employers and not employees”, he
observed.
Mr. Mahama made these remarks when he addressed a
brainstorm session of youth leaders and former recruits of GYEEDA in Tamale. The
session which was organised by YEfL focused on the Ghana Youth Entrepreneurship
and Employment Development Agency (GYEEDA) and the youth employment situation in
the country.
Recent exposé of its activities by Investigative
Journalist Manasseh Azure Awuni suggested that, GYEEDA is a ground for
government appointees and their cronies to fleece the nation’s resources rather
than making serious commitment towards ensuring that the youth of Ghana realise
their life’s aspirations.
Several millions of cedis were discovered to have been
allegedly misappropriated and contracts awarded to persons who did not have the
capacity to deliver or honour the terms and conditions of such contracts. In
some instances, some of the companies were alleged to have deliberately shortchanged
government during implementation processes or execution of the contracts
awarded to them.
Example of some of the companies that were cited in
the exposé and charged by the government to refund some amounts of money included
Zoomlion Ghana, a subsidiary of the Jospong Group of Companies, Rlg Communications,
Craftpro Limited and Asongtaba Cottage Industries of the AGAMS Group of
Companies and Goodwill International.
The AGAMS Group of Companies according to Joy News
report have since refunded a total of GH¢14,498,198.33 to
the state. The money was paid into the Economic and Organised Crime Office’s
bank account at the Bank of Ghana on April 24, 2014.
Relatively, some of the participants at the session
also expressed less hope in GYEEDA, because according to them, some of the
models created under the agency are discriminatory. They cited for instance,
the youth in driving programme which is only limited to certain regions in the
southern part of the country instead of the entire country.
There is also lack of serious monitoring and
supervision, some participants said, and as a result, a lot of people engaged
in models such as health and pupil teaching, refuse to go to work and yet
receive their allowances at the end of every month.
On whether GYEEDA jobs are sustainable, a lot of the
participants disagreed saying “there are numerous ghost names on the payroll of
the agency”. There are a lot of people who have not been officially engaged by
the agency but they are paid every month because that is a secret arrangement
between them and the Coordinators to steal from the state.
Participants also noted that, the over politicization
of GYEEDA is causing more harm than good to the youth of this country. “We have
situations where many of those engaged by GYEEDA are political party activists
and they think once it is their government that is in power, they can refuse to
work and get paid”, they decried.
On the way forward, participants suggested that government
place GYEEDA under the National Youth Authority and appoint a coordinator to
have oversight responsibilities over its programmes and do away with the status
quo where it is being run as a separate entity.
Government, they opined, should also institute a
rigorous monitoring and supervision scheme to ensure that anyone engaged by
GYEEDA to teach, work in a hospital or any public office reports to work and
punish or sack those who refuse to work.
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