Dignitaries at the launch. |
Ghanaians have been
advised to examine their actions and attitudes, and renew their mindsets in
order to win the fight against corruption in the country.
Madam Nkrumah, NCCE boss |
Madam Josephine Nkrumah,
Chairperson of the National Commission for Civic Education (NCCE), who described
corruption as a national crisis which widens the gap between the poor and rich
perpetuate social injustice.
She entreated the
citizenry to uphold the values of integrity, honesty, accountability,
discipline and peace, which share, and hold dear as a people, and challenged
Ghanaians to conduct an introspection in their lives and workplaces, in order
to eschew negative vices that create fertile grounds for corruption to grow.
The NCCE Chairperson made
these observations during the national launch of the I-SHAME Corruption in
Ghana project in Accra yesterday, and called on stakeholders to adopt
purposeful and deliberate approaches to teach and inculcate lasting values of
integrity and truthfulness among children and the youth.
The Interfaith Shaping
Hearts, Attitudes and Minds to End Corruption in Ghana, dubbed I-SHAME
Corruption, a 23-month project starting from April 2018 to February 2020.
The project which aims at
shaping the hearts, attitudes and minds of students of Ghanaians to shun
corruption in the society is being implemented by the Forum for Action on
Inclusion, Transparency and Harmony (FAITH) with other faith groups in the
country.
The Chairperson of the NCCE who chaired the launch, also
underscored the need for the faith leaders and Ghanaians to start teaching
children morals, and positive values of respect, honesty, dignity and
patriotism, which she stated were the software that drive the superstructure of
the Ghana’s future.
“As a country, we have come to a crossroad in our
nation building where we have to take a stand against corruption” she noted,
urging adults to be role models to the children, and appealed to stakeholders
to reexamine the educational curriculum to help instill these values in them.
Most Rev. Philip Naameh,
President of the Ghana Catholic Bishops’ Conference who performed the launch
said since God created man in His owned imagine, human beings were endowed with
light and goodness, adding that there was a duty for men, particularly the
religious to shine the light to dispel darkness in the world.
Noting that the African
and Ghanaian were incurably religious, the Archbishop of Tamale called on all
Ghanaians to reactivate and rekindle their lights and drive away the darkness
of evil of corruption around us.
With the launch of the
project, Mr. Samuel Zan Akologo, Executive Director for Caritas Ghana and head
of the Department of Human Development at the National Catholic Secretariat, stated
that the I-SHAME Corruption in Ghana project
will form Integrity Clubs in selected
Basic Schools across the ten Regions of Ghana, to target pupils and teachers,
with a co-curricular mentoring programme towards reorienting their behavior
pattern, against corruption.
He noted that the project
which would “contribute to uprooting Corruption from its tap root in Ghana”, is
a citizen’s initiative to address the menace of Corruption, through collaboration
with the Ghana Education Service and the National Commission for Civic
Education at all levels of engagement of implementation.
To this end, the
Executive Secretary said a Manual has been developed for that purpose to guide
the Teachers and as a basis for monitoring performance at the selected school.
In addition, he said
Officials of the NCCE Regional levels would conduct quarterly quizzes and
debates for Integrity Club Members to enhance learning and peer networking for
positive influence.
The Deputy Commissioner
of the Commission for Administrative Justice, Mr. Richard Quayson, who
commended the FBOs for their efforts, called for a more systematic approach to
dealing with corruption in the country.
Hajia Ayishetu
Abdul-Kadiri, Chair of the FAITH in Ghana Steering Committee, noted that the
FAITH in Ghana coalition would leverage on the lessons learnt and best
practices from an inter-faith cooperation for the 2016 elections in the
implementation of the I-SHAME corruption project.
She stated that among the
faith groups in the coalition on the project aside the Catholic Church,
includes the Office of the National Chief Imam (ONCI), Ahmadiyya Muslim Mission
(AMM), the Federation of Muslim Women’s Associations in Ghana (FOMWAG), The
Marshallan Relief and Development Services (MAREDES) and the Christian Mothers Association
(CMA).
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