Former Member of Parliament for Asokwa, Maxwell Kofi Jumah, has
described as ridiculous the call by the Coalition of Concerned Teachers
(CCT) on president-elect, Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo, to restore
teacher trainee allowances within its first 100 days in office.
Speaking on ClassFM on Thursday, the president of the coalition, King
Ali Awudu, said teachers voted for the NPP to restore the allowances and
believed in the party’s capacity to do so within the first three months
of assuming office.
“In the process of their campaign they said a whole lot of things, which
we bought into and voted for them massively. One of the key things they
used was the teacher training allowance. They told us emphatically that
they were going to restore the teacher training allowance.
At the time
that they were telling us that they would restore the allowance, the
outgoing government, led by John Dramani Mahama, was also telling us
that if it is the teacher training allowance that he needs to restore in
order to gain power then he will lose it, and indeed he has lost it.
So what it means is that we have voted for the NPP massively. If you
monitored the polls you would realise that in almost all the 38 teacher
training colleges, the NPP won. So what we are saying is that as soon as
they resume office from 7 January, at least within 100 days, we should
see the restoration of the teacher training allowance,” he said.
Reacting to the coalition's call, Mr Jumah said it was unfair on their part to give the NPP an ultimatum.
“Nana Akufo-Addo made a promise and it spans for four years. But to put a
gun to his head and give him an ultimatum of 100 days, that is what is
ridiculous. If they know how to give ultimatums, I think that they
should redirect their ultimatum to the previous government,” he stated.
The former CEO of the Kumasi Metropolitan Assembly (KMA) explained, “No
government can act without first going through parliament for financial
support. They have to put up a budget. A budget basically is an outline
of what we intend to do and we present it to parliament. Parliament will
have to go through and approve it then you can begin to execute what
your plans are.”
He added: “I was expecting enlightened people to suggest that we expect
Nana Akufo-Addo to put together a budget that will guide his
administration so that he will be able to implement some of the things
that he said he would do and that would have been a more enlightened
approach, but the way they are stating it, they look like a bunch of
ignoramuses: they don’t know anything, they are ignorant people. It’s
even unfair for them to come out like that.”
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