Kumasi Shoe Factory Archives - Citi 97.3 FM - Relevant Radio. Always https://citifmonline.com/tag/kumasi-shoe-factory/ Ghana News | Ghana Politics | Ghana Soccer | Ghana Showbiz Tue, 12 Dec 2017 07:43:35 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.0.8 https://citifmonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-CITI-973-FM-32x32.jpg Kumasi Shoe Factory Archives - Citi 97.3 FM - Relevant Radio. Always https://citifmonline.com/tag/kumasi-shoe-factory/ 32 32 ‘China shoe’ importers misleading Nitiwul for personal gain – DIHOC https://citifmonline.com/2017/12/china-shoe-importers-misleading-nitiwul-personal-gain-dihoc/ Tue, 12 Dec 2017 07:41:39 +0000 http://citifmonline.com/?p=382341 Managers of the Kumasi Shoe Factory, Defence Industries Holding Company Limited (DIHOC), have suggested that the recent criticism from Defence Minister, Dominic Nitiwul, directed at them, might have been influenced by persons who stand to gain from the collapse of the company. The shoe factory had been tasked with solely producing boots for purchase by the […]

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Managers of the Kumasi Shoe Factory, Defence Industries Holding Company Limited (DIHOC), have suggested that the recent criticism from Defence Minister, Dominic Nitiwul, directed at them, might have been influenced by persons who stand to gain from the collapse of the company.

The shoe factory had been tasked with solely producing boots for purchase by the Armed Forces and other security agencies, and footwear for students locally and for export.

[contextly_sidebar id=”3x6Q591B1HCkDfCBzKkLwnWrX87hyG5K”]However, according to them, importers of shoes from India and China, were misleading the Defence Minister and seeking the downfall of the factory in order to protect their interests.

Addressing a press conference on Monday to respond to the comments, the acting General Manager of the DIHOC Footwear Division Limited, Nii Konney Laryea said they did not intend to “attack the Minister, but rather to use this fine opportunity to let him know that he is being misled by people who do not have the interest of the company at heart, and who are bent on doing anything and everything to collapse the company in order to have the free hand to import boots and shoes from India and China for the security agencies.”

Nii Konney Laryea added that, the management of the company knows the identities of these persons and would ‘name and shame’ those who were attempting to cause the downfall of the factory  ‘at the appropriate time.’

“This is a big business for [the importers], and as far as DIHOC Footwear Division Limited is in operation, it constitutes a threat to their business of importing boots and shoes to the security agencies,” he said.

“The Management of DIHOC Footwear knows these enemies of the nation, who have vowed to slow the progress to this forward march of our great country. At the appropriate time, we shall name and shame these people.”

‘Let soldiers buy our shoes’

Since its revival in 2012, the factory has been on the verge of collapse, with a tour by government officials in August revealing that only 49 workers were currently employed there.

The managers of the facility have called on the Minister to direct the Armed Forces to purchase all their footwear from the Kumasi Shoe Factory, as had originally been intended, instead of importing them from Asia.

According to them ” a definite government policy” directing students and officers in the various security agencies to wear local shoes would go a long way to ensuring that the factory is able to operate at full capacity and employ more workers.

“We, therefore, want to use this platform to humbly request Dominic Nitiwul to assist the Company by directing the Ghana Armed Forces to order all their boots and shoes from the Company, and to appeal to his colleagues the Honorable Ministers of Interior, Finance, and Education to give similar directives to the other security agencies and educational institutions in the country to stop the importation of boots and shoes from China and India, and to buy from the company as a way of assisting the company,” Nii Konney Laryea said.

“This in our view, is the solution to restore and even increase the workforce of the company, in order to create more jobs for the youth of Ghana within the shortest possible time. The company can easily create an additional 600 jobs within the next two to three years, through such an initiative alone.”

By: Edwin Kwakofi/citifmonline.com/Ghana

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Nitiwul ‘lied’, he was briefed on Kumasi Shoe Factory – Managers https://citifmonline.com/2017/12/nitiwul-lied-he-was-briefed-on-kumasi-shoe-factory-managers/ Mon, 11 Dec 2017 15:29:19 +0000 http://citifmonline.com/?p=382304 The Defence Industries Holding Company Limited (DIHOC), managers of the Kumasi Shoe Factory, have accused the Minister of Defence, Dominic Nitiwul, of peddling falsehood about not being briefed on the state of the company. Mr. Nitiwul had earlier attributed the current deplorable state of the Kumasi Shoe Factory, to the ineffective management of the company. […]

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The Defence Industries Holding Company Limited (DIHOC), managers of the Kumasi Shoe Factory, have accused the Minister of Defence, Dominic Nitiwul, of peddling falsehood about not being briefed on the state of the company.

Mr. Nitiwul had earlier attributed the current deplorable state of the Kumasi Shoe Factory, to the ineffective management of the company.

[contextly_sidebar id=”IcJdm8VIEKNR5XOLaE92Xd3ZTPX3qaPP”]Speaking at the Meet the Press Series last Thursday, he also said the Ghana Armed Forces who are also shareholders in the business have been sidelined, with no accounts rendered to them by the private managers of the facility.

“Up until now, we haven’t been able to hold a single board meeting because for some reason, government wanted to give a grant of six million cedis from one of the funds. We then picked an individual, gave him this money and gave out, as part of the six million, a grant of four million. That individual has 60%, and the armed forces have 40%. I have paid a lot of money to this individual,” he said when he took his turn at the Meet the Press Series today [Thursday],” the Minister had alleged.

However, addressing a press conference today [Monday] to respond to the comments, the acting General Manager of the DIHOC footwear division limited, Nii Konney Laryea, dismissed the claims made by Dominic Nitiwul, explaining that the company had made a presentation to him, a little while after he had been sworn in as Minister

“With great sadness, this statement is untrue, and we would wish to set the records straight. Immediately after the swearing into office of the Defence Minister, a meeting of the Company’s Board was held at Burma Camp, with the Company’s management in attendance. The agenda of the meeting was to discuss all the issues confronting the Company, and to forward same to the Hon. Minister and the Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) since both of them had just assumed office and were not yet briefed about the activities and challenges of the Company,” he said.

Nii Konney Laryea added that, the Board had decided to meet with the new Minister, to brief him on the operations of the company, based on which an appointment was made for a meeting at 1:30pm.

“However, the Minister was held up at the Flagstaff House and we patiently waited at till 8:00pm to meet him. We made a 15 minutes summary presentation of the content of the dossier and handed same, together with copies of the minutes of the last Board Meeting to the Minister as per the Board Meeting resolution,” Nii Konney Laryea added.

The management of the company attributed the inability of their Board to meet as regularly as they used to, to the failure of the Minister to respond officially to the dossier they had presented him.

“The Company’s inability to hold a Board Meeting every quarter, which used to be the case, can only be attributed to the Hon. Minister’s neglect or inability to act on the dossier sent to him.”

Kumasi Shoe Factory (Photo: Olympus Digital)

Shoe factory troubles

Formerly known as the Ghana Industrial Holding Footwear Company Limited (GIHOC), the Kumasi Shoe Factory was revived in 2012 through a joint partnership between a Czech company, Knight Ghana Limited, DIHOC, which is owned by the Ghana Armed Forces (GAF).

The company was tasked with solely producing boots for purchase by the Armed Forces and other security agencies, and footwear for students locally and for export.

However, since then, the factory has been on the verge of collapse, with a tour by government officials in August revealing that only 49 workers were currently employed there.

The factory has reportedly trained over 200 workers, but because of irregular orders, only one-third of them are currently working.

At full capacity, the factory could have about 800 workers, and would create an extra 200 jobs indirectly for distributors.

By: Edwin Kwakofi/citifmonline.com/Ghana

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