Accra, July 11, GNA- The Ghana Post Company Limited is positioning itself to provide a new image and direction of postal services on the African continent in the face of serious technological developments and competition.
Elected as the new Chair of the Pan African Postal Union (PAPU) at the 25th Ordinary Session of the Administrative Council of the Union recently held in Accra, Ghana Posts is now diversifying its services, and would provide the leadership for a crusade to reform the African postal service to make it survive as a viable venture.
Three top Management Personnel told the Ghana News Agency (GNA) in an interview in Accra on Monday that ICT was going to be the main target in repositioning the postal service in Africa.
The management personnel: Mr Kofi Dua-Adonteng, Managing Director; Mr Samuel Asare Deputy Managing Director (Finance and Administration); and Mr Seth Obeng, General Manager (Financial Services) painted a bright future for the African postal services as the countries reformed the services to beat the impact of the threat of ICT.
Mr Dua-Adonteng said, in spite of the threats from the technological advances, the African post had tremendous future. He said the lack of finance was the biggest handicap of the of Postal administrations in Africa and the competition due to technological development in the global economic order had brought the postal sector under intense pressure.
However, postal system would survive because it was the main transporter of bulk mails.
Mr. Dua-Adonteng said the Ghana Posts had had to diversify to other lines of business to sustain itself since it weaned itself from Government subvention in 1999.
Currently Ghana Post had 330 main post offices and 700 agencies countrywide.
Mr. Dua-Adonteng said as the first and traditional provider of mail services, the Ghana Posts understood the service better to provide hybrids and species of electronic mails, and would soon introduce a tracking and tracing for the expedited mail service (EMS) for customers to know through an electronic system where their hard and bulk mails were as they went through transit.
With Ho, the Volta Regional capital as a starting point, the Company had also began operating Internet cafe's, which would be replicated in all the 10 regions of Ghana.
Mr. Dua-Adonteng added that the company would rely on broadband to provide electronic mail service in areas that did not have telephone lines. He identified financial services as a central component for the survival of postal services, and announced that the Ghana Post was running as a subagent of the Agricultural Development Bank to do international money transfer business.
Also the Post Office Savings Bank would soon be operational, to encourage savings mobilisation.
Mr. Samuel Asare, Deputy Managing Director (Finance and Administration) said feasibility studies for the Bank, which would exist as separate entity, with its own management, had been completed. For starters the Bank of Ghana had demanded 70 billion cedis, and the Company was looking for alliances to provide the leverage for the needed investment and capital structure.
The head office of the bank would be in Accra, and for the beginning, the post offices would lease spaces for the operation of the Bank.
Mr Obeng, the Financial Services Manager, who spoke on the electronic money transfer Instant Money Transfer (IMT), said there were 163 IMT centres out of the 330 post offices, to enhance easy floating of monies, even to the remotest part of the country.