Akufo-Addo Retires Auditor General msn.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from msn.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
+
The names of 13 new key appointees at the Presidency in President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo’s second term have been released.
All the appointees are to undertake their duties in acting capacities, subject to consultation with the yet-to-be constituted Council of State.
The list includes new entrant Dr Isaac Owusu Mensah as Director of Research who is replacing Victor Newman who recently passed on.
Emmanuel Adumua-Bossman
Other new entrants are Emmanuel Adumua-Bossman and Fawaz Aliu as the two new Deputy Chiefs Of Staff to replace Francis Asenso Boakye and Samuel Abu Jinapor who are now Members of Parliament.
Adumua-Bossman worked as the Director of the Impact Assessment Unit in the Office of the President from 2018 to 2020 and was also the Director for Planning and Implementation with the National Security unit from 2017 to 2018.
Young Ghanaian billionaire, Nana Kwame Bediako popularly known as Cheddar is noted for his constant flaunt of wealth.
The young billionaire has caused yet another stir on social media as images of his two luxurious Mercedes-Benz Maybach cars emerge on social media.
Nana Bediatuo Asante, secretary to the president of Ghana, was reported as the owner of the cars when the photos first surfaced online.
However, the inscription on the number plates of the cars, FJ1C (Freedom Jacob Ceasar 1) and FJ2C ((Freedom Jacob Ceasar 2), show that Nana ‘Cheddar’ Kwame Bediako owns the exotic cars.
The two extravagant cars are reported to worth around $173,000 (GHC1,015,312.95) each.
Most controversial government moves that raised eyebrows in 2020 The year 2020 will go down in the history of Ghana as one of the most controversial years under the leadership of President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo. His administration made certain moves that raised eyebrows. As the year 2020 comes to an end, GhanaWeb hereby reviews some decisions by the Government of Ghana which ought not to have happened.
1. Agyapa Royalties Deal Under the deal, Ghana would own 51 per cent of the Jersey-based company Agyapa Royalties and the remaining shares would be listed on the London Stock Exchange. In return for handing over such a large share of their future revenues, the government has argued that it could raise US$500 million in capital to ease their growing debt crisis by listing the remaining 49 per cent of shares.