Look at the amount Ghana Statistical Service spent on late defilement review
The Ghana Statistical Service (GSS) has uncovered that it burned through ¢6 million in directing its debasement discernment report as of late delivered.
As indicated by the GSS, a part of the use was from United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC).
This was uncovered by the Government Statistician, Prof Samuel Kobina Annim.
Talking on the JoyNews' AM Show on Friday, July 29, they can do the examination with ¢5 million all alone.
"Altogether, we spent about ¢6 million on this overview however clearly this had a part of the use from UNODC side due to the specialized help they gave yet when we are doing this without help from anyone else, we think something around ¢5 million will do the trick," he said.
Prof. Annim likewise said they will draw in with the Finance Minister to perceive how frequently this exploration should be possible.
"We have previously begun discussions on that tragically the discussions are from our advancement accomplices yet the thing will do along with CHRAJ is to move toward the Minister so that Finance might see what government can do concerning whether consistently or at regular intervals."
The expressed report by the GSS along with CHRAJ and UNODC positioned the Ghana Police Service as the most bad organization in the country.
As per the study, more than 17.4 million pay-offs were paid in 2021 with Police officials beating the rundown of authorities who accept kickbacks with 53.2%.
In the mean time, the Inspector General of the Ghana Police Service, Dr George Akuffo Dampare in a five-page letter to GSS and CHRAJ on Wednesday, July 27, scrutinized the philosophy used to lead the overview.
"Our uneasiness, consequently, is the utilization of particular positioning strategy to extend the results in a way that puts an uncalled for center around the Police Service with all the others in your defilement record getting away from public examination," the IGP said.
Dr. Akuffo Dampare made sense of that per the Police's investigation of the report, the exploration might have been impacted by "a generally unavoidable generalizing of the Police Service."
"The Service has now turned into the default organization of decision for such exploration and has in this manner energized a well established public generalization throughout the long term