Ghana: Uncertainty hangs over new government anti-corruption plan
President John Dramani Mahama wants to build trust by strengthening public accountability. But governance experts say the success of the anti-corruption plan will depend on the consistent enforcement of existing laws.
https://p.dw.com/p/5GhrnParliamentarians in Ghana have a certain reputation for lining their own pocketsImage: Francis Kokoroko/REUTERSAdvertisementGhana has launched its new National Ethics and Anti-Corruption Action Plan (NEACAP), with President John Dramani Mahama pledging to strengthen accountability, ethical leadership and public participation in government institutions in the fight against corruption.
Unveiling the five-year strategy at the University of Ghana in Accra last week, Mahama described corruption in the country as "a national development challenge" that weakens institutions, discourages investment and erodes public trust. The leader called for collective effort involving government, civil society, the private sector and citizens, saying the fight against corruption requires the participation of all Ghanaians.Public services from roadworks to sanitation to waste collection suffer in Ghana when politicians siphon public funds into their own pocketsImage: Misper Apawu/AP/picture alliance Strong democracy, weak corruption oversight Often regarded as one of West Africa's most stable democracies, Ghana has enjoyed decades of relatively peaceful elections and democratic transfers of power.
Yet corruption continues to undermine public confidence across the nation, weakening public service delivery and discouraging investment. The new action plan seeks to change this by improving coordination among anti-corruption institutions, strengthening oversight, promoting ethical leadership across the public sector and increasing citizen participation in accountability efforts. It will replace Ghana's previous National Anti-Corruption Action Plan, which had widely been criticized for falling short of its objectives as its implementation remained inconsistent despite an extensive legal and institutional framework.
According to Transparency International, Ghana has a sizeable corruption problemImage: Sascha Steinach/IMAGO The launch comes as Ghana continues to make only modest progress in international corruption rankings: According to the 2025 Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) by Transparency International, Ghana scored 43 out of 100, ranking 76th globally while remaining above the Sub-Saharan African regional average. The country continues to trail behind African leaders such as the Seychelles, Cabo Verde, and Botswana. Transparency International Ghana says the country's performance has stagnated because of weak enforcement of anti-corruption laws, political interference and insufficient institutional reforms.
Billions lost to graft each year Analysts like Mary Awelana Addah, Executive Director of Transparency International Ghana, agree the country's problems are not based on a lack of anti-corruption institutions but rather on ensuring that these mechanisms are able to operate independently and effectively. "The corruption problem in Ghana is a very large one. It's been very costly to the state.
It is endemic and systemic in nature," Addah told DW. She explained that corruption had resulted in a deficit of nearly 15 billion euros in financial irregularities identified in the Auditor-General's 2024 report alone. The scale of the issue directly affects citizens, resulting in shortages of medicines, weak public infrastructure, and the diversion of resources intended for national development.
Ghana: Anas' app to record corruptionTo view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video According to Addah, the new framework places greater emphasis on ethics, measurable targets, independent monitoring and public reporting. However, she also warned that its success will largely depend on whether political leaders can demonstrate the will to apply the law consistently. "We have the laws.
We also have the institutions. But enforcement remains inconsistent. Sanctions are very weak, and the powerful actors in our system are always insulated from the consequences of corruption," she told DW.
Trust in media also on the line Journalists are also questioning whether Ghana can translate its commitment to fighting corruption into meaningful accountability. Speaking at a civil society anti-corruption forum in Accra in March, Executive Director Sulemana Braimah of Media Foundation for West Africa said that Ghana's latest CPI score showed progress had been "slow and uneven." "The gap between investigative reporting and actual sanctions remains a critical challenge," Braimah said, warning that the failure to hold public officials accountable risked undermining confidence in both public institutions and in the media, if they fail to highlight instances of fraud and corruption.
According to Braimah, the new system has to work in order to ensure the traditional role of media outlets as government watchdogs.In 2021, Ghanians took to the streets, prostesting against corruption as part of the #fixthecountry protest sweeping the countrzImage: Nipah Dennis/AFP/Getty Images DW's Eric M
Đọc thêm từ Thế giới

호르무즈서 카타르 LNG선 이란 무인기 공격에 폭발 위험
본문국제중동·아프리카호르무즈서 카타르 LNG선 이란 무인기 공격에 폭발 위험김지훈기자수정 2026-07-07 22:39펼침0:00Your browser does not support theaudio element.구글 선호 매체 등록사우디 국적 유조선도 공격받아 손상 입어지난달 30일(현지시각) 이란 반다르아바스 인근 호르무즈해협에서 한 선박이 보인다. WANA 로이터 연합뉴스 광고호르무즈해협에서 피격된 유조선 두 척 중 한 척이 폭발 위험에 처했다.

이 대통령 “한-나토 방위산업 파트너십 2.0으로 격상 제안”
본문정치청와대이 대통령 “한-나토 방위산업 파트너십 2.0으로 격상 제안”서영지기자수정 2026-07-07 22:44펼침0:00Your browser does not support theaudio element.구글 선호 매체 등록이재명 대통령이 7일(현지시각) 튀르키예 앙카라에서 마르크 뤼터 북대서양조약기구(NATO·나토) 사무총장과 면담에 앞서 기념촬영을 하고 있다.

U.K. Live Updates: Farage Says He Will Resign as Lawmaker, Setting Off Special Election
Nigel Farage, leader of the populist right-wing party Reform U.K., has come under increasing pressure after a series of revelations about undisclosed gifts and donations.
Telangana sets target of 12 crore workdays under VB-GRAM G scheme
Panchayat Raj and Rural Development Minister Danasari Anasuya (Seethakka) on Tuesday directed officials to ensure the generation of 12 crore workdays across Telangana under the VBG Ram-G scheme during the current financial year.Addressing a video conference with District Addition