
The Deputy Finance Minister-designate, Thomas Nyarko Ampem has clarified why he did not undertake the mandatory National Service assignment.
According to him, he was exempted because he trained as a teacher.
“Hello friends, following my vetting today, I wish to state that I was a teacher with GES that’s why I didn’t do the normal national service,” he posted on Facebook on February 24.
During his vetting by Parliament’s Appointment Committee earlier, the Minority Leader, Alexander Afenyo-Markin asked Mr Nyarko whether he has undertaken that national assignment. The following dialogue ensued:
Afenyo-Amarkin: Did you do National Service?
Thomas Ampem: Mr Chairman, I did not do National Service…
Afenyo-Markin: Have you done National Service? Yes or No?
Thomas Ampem: No.
This disclosure by Mr Ampem goes contrary to the provisions of Ghana National Service Scheme Act, 1980 (Act 426). According to information on the National Service Authority’s website, “The National Service programme is a compulsory one-year service required of all citizens of Ghana who are 18 years and above, at the time of deployment.
Indeed, Section 7 (1) of Act 426 states, “A person who has not commenced and completed his period of national service shall not-
(a) obtain employment outside the Scheme; or (b) be employed by any other person outside the Scheme; or (c) be engaged in any employment outside the Scheme, whether self-employed or otherwise, without the prior permission, in writing, of the Board.
(2) It shall be the duty of every employer to ascertain from every employee, upon his appointment, whether or not he is liable to national service and if he is, the employer shall notify the fact to the Board forthwith.
However, Section 8 of the Act provides for an exemption, “The Board may exempt any person to whom the Scheme applies from compliance with the provisions of this Act, or postpone the date on which any person shall be first engaged under the Scheme.
As it turned out, Mr Ampem has been exempted because the teacher training programme has a National Service compoment.
The National Service Scheme which started in 1973, among others, is aimed at encouraging the spirit of national service among all segments of Ghanaian society in the effort of nation-building through active participation, undertaking projects designed to combat hunger, illiteracy, disease and unemployment in Ghana, as well as helping provide essential services and amenities, particularly in towns and villages of the rural areas of Ghana.
Read also:
The post I didn’t do National Service because I trained as a teacher – Deputy Finance Minister-designate first appeared on 3News.
Read Full Story
Facebook
Twitter
Pinterest
Instagram
Google+
YouTube
LinkedIn
RSS