An aggrieved pensioner bondholder is cautioning Minister of Finance Ken Ofori-Atta of dire consequences even in the afterlife if he continues with plans to include their funds in the Domestic Debt Exchange Programme (DDEP).
The unnamed bondholder was among hundreds of pensioners who started picketing at the premises of the Ministry of Finance early this week to protest Ofori-Atta’s plans.
He told the Ghana News Agency that if himself and others are ‘forced’ to die without getting back their monies, they will exact vengeance on the minister when they meet in the afterlife.
“If we die ahead of him and we go and get a post in the afterlife, his ghost / soul will weed forever … we won’t spare him, if you stress us here, you will come and meet us in the afterlife. You (if you like) don’t give us our money and let us die.”
He continued that if the Minister does the right thing by giving them their monies, “and we spend it and die, we wouldn’t have any issues with you. We know we all came to this world, we won’t do any thing to you.
“If you do the opposite, and you force us to die and we get a position at the other side, you will see no rest,” he stated in Twi.
Ofori-Atta met with the picketing senior civil servants and explained why the government needed to include them in the DDEP. He said Ghana risked economic collapse if the programme failed.
On their part, a representative said the insistence to include pensioners will have negative implications including affecting their cost of medication and other short to medium and long term plans.
Meanwhile, the February 7, 2023 deadline for the DDEP of the Government of Ghana has been extended by three extra days over 'technical glitches.'
The Ministry of Finance announced the development via a press release which read in part: "In connection with the ongoing Domestic Debt Exchange Programme (DDEP), the Government of Ghana thanks all bondholders who have so far tendered their bonds.
"However, it has come to the attention of Government that some bondholders faced technical glitches as they tried to complete the online tender process."
The statement added: "Government is providing bondholders with a window to complete processes for tendering their bonds, in response to the terms of Exchange as amended pursuant to the 2nd Amended and Restated Exchange Memorandum. This window ends on Friday, 10th February 2023 at 4:00 p.m. (GMT)."
The release dated February 7 was signed by Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta.
This becomes the fourth extension since the first announcement was made in December 2022.
"The timetable of the Exchange is not otherwise affected by this, except for the Announcement Date which is now expected to occur on Monday, 13th February 2023.
"The settlement of the Exchange is still scheduled for Tuesday, 14th February 2023. Except as set forth in this paragraph, the terms and conditions of the Exchange are not modified or amended."
The DDEP is part of conditionalities by government to access an International Monetary Fund bailout. The government is aiming to achieve IMF Board approval by March after sealing a Staff-Level Agreement in December 2022.
Source: ghanaweb.com
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I feel sad for these old people whose only source of survival is been taken away from them. These are individual monies they accumulated through out their working lives with the hope that they will have something to sustain themselves after retiring from active service. Today they are been subjected to to pain by someone who has messed up the economy. If the finance minister loves this country why can't he also use the 1.5% transaction adviser fees he has been taking from loans contracted by Ghana. It is not a good thing for people to be cursing you. What if these people had not invested in bonds. You just can't understand this. You want to use my personal money to do something, i say no and that one to i have to beg, where have we seen this before. So the gold, timber, manganese, bauxite, cocoa, crude oil have all been squandered, it's old men and women's hard earned savings that will save Ghana. If we have grown up children who are still depending on their 80+ year old parents to survive then it would have been better if those children were not born. The current economic mess is self inflicted, anybody who claims to know all ends up knowing nothing, this is the state in which Ghana finds itself. Those everyone trusted to come and salvage Ghana are becoming a nightmare, elderly people being subjected to such in humane treatment, rather unfortunate.