NDC questions attribution of mobile money Interoperability to Bawumia

The Director of Legal Affairs of the opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC), Godwin Tamekloe, has challenged claims that mobile money interoperability was the brainchild of former Vice President Dr. Mahamudu Bawumia.
In a social media post, Mr. Tamekloe argued that the groundwork for interoperability was laid under the John Mahama administration.
According to him, the Bank of Ghana signed the interoperability contract in 2016 before the New Patriotic Party (NPP) came to power.
He explained that the Akufo-Addo-Bawumia administration only reviewed the cost of the contract after assuming office in 2017 and subsequently went ahead with the implementation.
“How is this the brainchild of Dr. Bawumia?” he asked.
Mr. Tamekloe further questioned attempts to credit the former Vice President with the growth in mobile money services, noting that mobile money agents were already in existence before 2017.
He argued that the increase in agents was driven by demand and telecom sector expansion rather than direct government action.
He concluded his critique with a sharp rebuke, stating that “a man should never get to the point where he believes in his own lies.”
Source: classfmonline.com/Cecil Mensah
Trending News
Ras Mubarak endorses Julius Debrah for NDC flagbearer in 2028
08:09Mahama: NDC majority will be used for reforms, not dictatorship
02:24GNFS takes on 'blazing domestic fire' at Lartebiokorshie, warns residents to keep windows, doors shut
20:16NDC questions attribution of mobile money Interoperability to Bawumia
08:30Minister warns DStv over pricing dispute, threatens 'showdown'
02:21Kwahu West education directorate appeals for kindergarten furniture
06:53Gov't to invest GHS2b in healthcare infrastructure to improve equitable accessibility, President Mahama says
05:12A/R: Aboabo Assembly Member reportedly killed in violent clash at Mpatuam
18:00Ghana, Egypt explore deeper defence cooperation
08:10MultiChoice clarifies it hasn't agreed to price reduction
23:58