Some members of the Ghana Armed Forces (GAF) have sent a very disturbing open letter to the president and the minister of defence on the state of affairs in the army. According to them, their grievances are not being addressed after numerous complains and thus they have resorted to an open letter as a last resort. Below we publish the full details
What Is Happening In The Ghana Armed Forces?
The commander-in-chief [President Kufuor], his brother, Dr Addo-Kufour and the top echelon of the Ghana Armed Forces (GAF) are creating the wrong impression to the nation that all is well with this potentially volatile institution. The truth of the matter, is that, if things are not handled properly, the mismanagement, poor leadership and insensitivity on the part our political and military leaders may collapse the GAF. What are we saying?
For example: Major Azumah, Major Tom Wanya and a host other officers went without a penny, although officers are entitled to the option of “buying off the residual service”; you are now forced to resign your commission outright.
Instead of identifying and solving the problems of people trained with taxpayer’s money abandoning their career prematurely, the leadership of the GAF is rather planning to introduce a 20-year compulsory service for even those officers who enlisted years ago. Well, if this is a new labor or human resource law/principle, we shall see if it will see the light of day. That day heaven will break loose. The question we should ask ourselves is; why are the men deserting having served so many years?
The defense minister and his cronies should explain to Ghanaians why they have abandoned the Ghanaian peacekeepers - the hen that lay the golden eggs - whose proceeds they use to sponsor Ghana missions abroad, build gigantic monuments, claim praises and yet refuse to look after them.
The Ghanaian soldier (peacekeeper) is the least paid and badly resourced in all the mission theatres in the world. Why? For example, the United Nations(UN) pays a clothing allowance of $68 a month for every soldier deployed in a mission area, but the sad part of this is that we struggle to get one pair of uniform without boot for the whole tour of duty and yet they expect us to appear neat at all times. Because you do not want to disgrace your country, you buy uniform with the pittance allowance you are given. Meanwhile a pair of uniform only cost $25. This is just the least of examples I want use for now. More and dearly ones will come out depending on how these issues are addressed.
The GAF should explain to Ghanaians why Ghana is not taking advantage of wet lease system introduced by UN in 1996. Countries like Bangladesh have made UN peacekeeping operation their number one foreign income earner. Ladies and gentlemen, what is this animal called wet lease system? Wet lease is a concept based on MOU between UN and troops contributing countries to provide for example 20 cars, 30 weapons etc and be self sustained in medical, logistics backing for own troops and the UN will reimburse and at the end of the operation Ghana will park home whatever we leased to UN. There is this clause which states that the troop contributing country will have to honor 85% of the MOU to qualify for reimbursement. Ghana always provides about 84% or less, operates with the items without reimbursement. People [in authority] should be charged and tried for causing financial loses to the state.
[NB: The writer(s) wish to remain anonymous for fear of intimidation and eventual punishment, because, according to them, the last time a group of Kosovo peacekeepers made their grievances public, some scapegoats were dismissed]
Some members of the Ghana Armed Forces (GAF) have sent a very disturbing open letter to the president and the minister of defence on the state of affairs in the army. According to them, their grievances are not being addressed after numerous complains and thus they have resorted to an open letter as a last resort. Below we publish the full details
What Is Happening In The Ghana Armed Forces?
The commander-in-chief [President Kufuor], his brother, Dr Addo-Kufour and the top echelon of the Ghana Armed Forces (GAF) are creating the wrong impression to the nation that all is well with this potentially volatile institution. The truth of the matter, is that, if things are not handled properly, the mismanagement, poor leadership and insensitivity on the part our political and military leaders may collapse the GAF. What are we saying?
For example: Major Azumah, Major Tom Wanya and a host other officers went without a penny, although officers are entitled to the option of “buying off the residual service”; you are now forced to resign your commission outright.
Instead of identifying and solving the problems of people trained with taxpayer’s money abandoning their career prematurely, the leadership of the GAF is rather planning to introduce a 20-year compulsory service for even those officers who enlisted years ago. Well, if this is a new labor or human resource law/principle, we shall see if it will see the light of day. That day heaven will break loose. The question we should ask ourselves is; why are the men deserting having served so many years?
The defense minister and his cronies should explain to Ghanaians why they have abandoned the Ghanaian peacekeepers - the hen that lay the golden eggs - whose proceeds they use to sponsor Ghana missions abroad, build gigantic monuments, claim praises and yet refuse to look after them.
The Ghanaian soldier (peacekeeper) is the least paid and badly resourced in all the mission theatres in the world. Why? For example, the United Nations(UN) pays a clothing allowance of $68 a month for every soldier deployed in a mission area, but the sad part of this is that we struggle to get one pair of uniform without boot for the whole tour of duty and yet they expect us to appear neat at all times. Because you do not want to disgrace your country, you buy uniform with the pittance allowance you are given. Meanwhile a pair of uniform only cost $25. This is just the least of examples I want use for now. More and dearly ones will come out depending on how these issues are addressed.
The GAF should explain to Ghanaians why Ghana is not taking advantage of wet lease system introduced by UN in 1996. Countries like Bangladesh have made UN peacekeeping operation their number one foreign income earner. Ladies and gentlemen, what is this animal called wet lease system? Wet lease is a concept based on MOU between UN and troops contributing countries to provide for example 20 cars, 30 weapons etc and be self sustained in medical, logistics backing for own troops and the UN will reimburse and at the end of the operation Ghana will park home whatever we leased to UN. There is this clause which states that the troop contributing country will have to honor 85% of the MOU to qualify for reimbursement. Ghana always provides about 84% or less, operates with the items without reimbursement. People [in authority] should be charged and tried for causing financial loses to the state.
[NB: The writer(s) wish to remain anonymous for fear of intimidation and eventual punishment, because, according to them, the last time a group of Kosovo peacekeepers made their grievances public, some scapegoats were dismissed]