Chairman of the National Peace Council, Reverend Professor Emmanuel Asante has said monetisation of politics in the country continues denies well-qualified persons from seeking political office.

According to him, there are many people with brilliant ideas and with the good mentality to serve the nation but due to their inability to dole out money, they fail to go through the initial stages within their political parties.

The Professor was speaking at national stakeholders’ consultation forum on monetisation of politics organised by the Ministry of Parliamentary Affairs in Accra on Monday, dubbed: “Money, Influence, Corruption and Capture: Can Ghana’s Democracy be Safeguarded”.

He added that the state of monetization in politics has led to the lack of patriotism and robbed the nation of its hard-won reputation of peace and development.

Meanwhile, Dr. Evans Aggrey-Darkoh, Chief Director of the Ministry of Parliamentary Affairs, said monetization in politics is a grave concern to all democracy-enhancing institutions and individuals.

“We recognize the immense contribution of political parties to the democracy of the country but also we recognize that monetization in politics, which has encouraged elite control, corruption, and violence, has dire consequences for the sustenance of the democracy,” he said.

Dr. Aggrey-Darkoh said the forum would help provide appropriate recommendations to curb monetization in politics.

Speaking on the relevance of the forum;

Mr. Osei Kyei-Mensah-Bonsu, the Minister of Parliamentary Affairs, said the forum would encourage a national discourse on monetization in politics and come out with measures to curtail the concern.

He also added that, if care is not taken, political positions would rest on only the rich in society to the detriment of a competency-based approach, which would affect the core values of democratic governance.

The majority Leader continued to say that the Inter-Parliamentary Union has called on Parliament to ensure that by 2025, women in its membership would constitute 30 percent.

Professor Joseph Atsu Ayee, Senior Lecturer, Political Science Department, University of Ghana, has aslo called on the government to design comprehensive legislation to promote party accountability and prevent money laundering in political elections.

“Even though laws and regulations were important, they require a conducive social fabric that empowers citizens and encourages accountability, and ensures proper implementation and sustainability of integrity-enhanced system”, he added.

Source: Dailyviewgh.com | Dickson Boadi

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