A
member of the Justice Dzamefe Presidential Commission of Inquiry into
Ghana’s 2014 World Cup fiasco, Moses Foh-Amoaning, has taken the
Ministry of Youth and Sports and the Ghana Football Association to task,
describing the payment of winning bonus in cash to the Black Stars in
far away Rwanda last Saturday as unfortunate and a breach of
government’s directives.
The payment of $10,000 to each of
the Black Stars players was the outstanding bonus left unpaid in the
team’s earlier 7-1 victory over Mauritius in an AFCON qualifying match
in Accra last June.
Expressing concern about the alleged payment
in cash after the Stars’ 1-0 win over Rwanda’s Amavubis, Mr Foh-Amoaning
told the Graphic Sports that the action by the ministry flouted the
directives of government’s White Paper that endorsed the Commission’s
recommendations that in future no bonuses should be paid in cash.
He
also blamed the FA for condoning the ministry’s disregard of the
government’s position, by accepting the bonuses paid to them in cash for
onward transfer to the players.
“The Justice Dzamefe Commission
of Inquiry was established by law and the report was endorsed by a
government’s White Paper, so it has become law which should be
implemented by the Ministry of Youth and Sports,” said the ace
broadcaster and law lecturer.
He added that it was, therefore,
unfortunate for an implementing agent to flout the very law it was
supposed to be implementing. “This should not have happened.“
Explaining
further, he noted that it was unacceptable the excuse that the FA
accepted payment in cash because it was under pressure from the players,
because the process of carrying cash to the players in another country
was not only risky, but also cumbersome.
“It doesn’t make any sense to fly money to pay players because it is easier and safer to pay them through their banks in Ghana.”
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