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This is the second time that John Mahama has been President of Ghana. His first term in government was when he inherited the government of President John Atta Mills who died in office in 2012. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Mahama has remained as the leader of the National Democratic Congress since the death of Atta Mills.
The New Patriotic Party, found in 1992, is the successor to the Gold Coast's The Big Six independence achiever party United Gold Coast Convention (UGCC); the People's National Convention, and the Convention People's Party, successor to Kwame Nkrumah's original party of the same name, which was the incumbent government of Ghana for 10 years from ...
www.moc.gov.gh The Ministry of Communication, Digital Technology and Innovation is a government ministry responsible for the development of communications and technology in Ghana . The ministry's offices are in Accra , Greater Accra .
National Information Technology Agency. Its mandate includes identifying, promoting and developing innovative technologies, standards, guidelines and practices among government agencies and local governments, as well as ensuring the sustainable growth of ICT via research & development planning and technology acquisition strategies to facilitate Ghana's prospect of becoming a technology-driven ...
The Cabinet of Ghana is the Executive Branch of the Government of Ghana. The Cabinet members are appointed by the President and report to the President. The Cabinet is constituted in conformity with Article 76 (1) of the 1992 Constitution of Ghana. The Constitution enjoins the President to have a Cabinet of no fewer than 10 and not more than 19 ...
Ghana: Ghana Statistical Service (GSS) statsghana.gov.gh Guinea: Institut National de la Statistique (INS) stat-guinee.org Guinea-Bissau: Instituto Nacional de Estatistica da Guiné-Bissau (INE) stat-guinebissau.com Ivory Coast: Institut National de la Statistique de Côte d'Ivoire (INS) ins.ci Kenya: Kenya national bureau of statistics (KNBS ...
Established by the government of Ghana under the FWSC ACT, 2007 (Act 737), the Fair Wages and Salaries Commission has the mandate of implementing the new Government Pay Policy (i.e. Single Spine Pay Policy) as regard salaries, wages, grading and classification of public service workers.
The Public Services Commission has its roots in 1947 during the British colonial period. It was set up upon the recommendation of the Haragin Committee for an impartial public services body to manage human resource administration and statecraft in British West African jurisdictions - Gold Coast, Nigeria, The Gambia and Sierra Leone. [2]