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We can’t meet teachers’ Feb. 29 deadline – Haruna Iddrisu

February 24, 2016
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The educational sector is likely to come to a standstill following a confession by the Minister of Employment and Labour Relations Haruna Iddrisu, that government cannot meet the demands by the teacher unions before the end of February.

The various teacher unions; the National Association of Graduate Teachers (NAGRAT), the Ghana National Association of Teachers (GNAT) and the Coalition of Concerned Teachers (CCT) are demanding the payment of their salary arrears by February 29, or they will embark on a strike.

[contextly_sidebar id=”zlX2wRkrvRgZCcZNAwxDl5ailrwoKiko”]A few meetings between government and the teacher unions have failed to yield positive results.

Speaking on Eyewitness News, Haruna Iddrisu, said “the bottom line is that, government cannot meet the 29th February deadline of the groups. It is practically impossible given the volume of data that we need to process.”

He also said the posture by the teacher unions “is not a fair labour practice”.

Haruna Iddrisu explained that although the grievances raised by the unions are legitimate, it cannot be solved before the end of February.

“I’m beginning to appreciate how enormous the problem has been, but the commitment is that, we will pay those we’ve recruited. But they will be paid only subject to validation of their data by the Auditor General. Outstanding allowances need to be processed, we need to discuss it further and the Minister of Finance will deal with it with the Controller and Accountant General,” he added.

Accusations and counter accusations

The Ghana Education Service (GES) had accused some of the teachers of faking their documents hence delaying the payments.

According to the GES, out of 14,575 input forms that were initially submitted by teachers for processing and payment, only 6,268 were found to be attached with genuine supporting documents.

The teacher unions responded by saying they are not to blame if some of the teachers have fake certificates and that the GES, which recruits teachers, should be blamed.

Some even called for the Director General Jacob Kor to be arrested for supervising the recruitment of these teachers.

–

By: Godwin A. Allotey/citifmonline.com/Ghana

Follow @AlloteyGodwin

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