Sunyani Teaching Hospital not captured in 2024 budget – Akandaoh

Story By: Sandra Adei Djanie

The Member of Parliament for Juaboso, Kwabena Mintah Akandoh has questioned the government’s commitment in converting the Bono Regional Hospital in Sunyani into a Teaching Hospital.

The Health Minister, Kwaku Agyemang Manu, cut the sod for the project on Saturday, November 18, 2023.

However, in a press statement on behalf of the Minority in Parliament, Mr Akandoh said the government’s 2024 budget statement and financial estimates read on Wednesday had no allocation for the construction or expansion of the Sunyani hospital.

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“There is no known government policy, financial allocation and the political will to undertake such an expansion of the facility into a teaching facility, and the minister knows there is no allocation in the 2024 budget,” he stated.

The sod cutting, he added, is one of the antics of the Akufo-Addo-Bawumia administration to deceive the people of Bono.

“The supposed sod cutting amid an IMF programme and the proximity to an election year is suspicious,especially when the project was not captured in the budget.”

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Mr Akandoh reminded Ghanaians of the government’s failure to fund similar promised projects in the past, citing the demolition of the well-functioning La General Hospital and an Accident and Emergency Centre at the Dormaa Hospital without subsequent funding.

Read the full statement below;

MINORITY IN PARLIAMENT EXPOSES GOVERNMENT’S DECEPTIVE TEACHING HOSPITAL PROMISE WITHOUT BUDGETARY BACKING

Accra, [19/11/2023]

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The Minority in Parliament is compelled to address a matter of grave concern regarding the purported sod-cutting to start the conversion of the Bono Regional Hospital into a Teaching Hospital, as orchestrated by the Minister responsible for Health on the 18th of October at the Bono Regional Hospital.

Contrary to the grandstanding by the Minister, a thorough examination of the 2024 budget statement reveals an alarming absence of any government policy, political will, or financial allocation aimed at transforming the Bono Regional Hospital into a Teaching Hospital or establishing a medical school at the University of Energy and Natural Resources in the next fiscal year or the medium term.

It is disheartening that the Minister, fully aware of the absence of any provision in the 2024 budget, recently orchestrated a sod-cutting event at the Bono Regional Hospital in Sunyani to signify the initiation of processes for the conversion of the Regional Hospital into a Teaching Hospital. This can only be described as a flagrant display of dishonesty, misleading the public with a project that lacks the necessary budgetary backing.

The Minister’s initial announcement on the 24th of July 2023, during a meeting with stakeholders of the Sunyani Hospital, claimed that Cabinet, at its 45th Meeting, had approved a Memorandum of Understanding for the transformation of the Bono Regional Hospital into a Teaching Hospital. At the same meeting, the Minister emphasized that this transformation would necessitate the establishment of a medical school at the University of Energy and Natural Resources.

While the timing of this announcement was already suspicious, given the government’s desperate bid for an IMF program, coupled with the proximity to an election year known for unfulfilled promises, it was expected that such a monumental announcement would be substantiated in the budget. Regrettably, this expectation remains unmet.

The parallels with a prior promise to upgrade the La General Hospital are uncanny. Despite securing funds through a loan, the La General Hospital project, originally budgeted and promised in the 2020 budget, is now 49 months overdue, with construction yet to commence. The 2024 budget projections now aim to initiate construction in 2024, pushing completion beyond 2027.

In the seventh year of governance, it is customary for a government to showcase completed projects. However, the Akufo-Addo administration seems to be deviating from this norm by continuously piling on unfulfilled promises.

A government that failed miserably to fund projects promised in 2020, including the construction of the La General Hospital, Tema Regional Hospital, and an Accident and Emergency Centre at Dormaa Hospital, should be met with scepticism when making lofty promises, especially one as significant as delivering a Teaching Hospital.

As the Minority in Parliament, we assert that credibility and trust form the bedrock of a democratic mandate, and governments must treat the trust bestowed upon them as sacred. Our quest to build a better health system for our people must be guided by truth and transparency.

Thank you.

KWABENA MINTAH AKANDOH
(Ranking Member on the Parliamentary Select Committee on Health and MP for Juaboso Constituency)

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