The Former President and flagbearer of the National Democratic Congress (NDC) John Dramani Mahama has dared the Akufo-Addo-led administration to show him and Ghanains the very projects that he has undertaken from the loans he contracted.
In the ex -ex-president’s view, there are no single projects to account for the loans Akuffo Addo and his team have assessed over the years.
John Mahama accused the Akufo-Addo administration and his government of mortgaging the future of the Ghanaian youth with loans that had been contracted resulting in huge sums of debt.
He expressed that President Akufo-Addo and his ministers will not be the ones responsible for paying those debts but rather, the youth of this country.
In his address at a gathering in the North East as part of his building Ghana agenda tour on Tuesday, April 16, Mr. Mahama voiced out that “In 2016 if we divided the debt, if we all decided that we were going to pack our bags and leave Ghana and so let us share the debt and everybody should pay him and then we will go. If we divided the debt, all of us would have paid 4000 Cedis.
“Today, if we say we are going to divide the debts, all of us are given Ghana up, we will pay our debts and go, and so we are going to share the debt for everybody to pay, every one of you here owes 20,000 Cedis, he expressed.
“The point is even, the errubond alone, in six years the president’s cousin, the Finance Minister borrowed 13.5 billion Dollars and if we had seen highways, bridges, regional hospitals, universities, schools, water, electricity, we would say that money was well spent. but after after 13.5 billion Cedis, just show me in the North East here, what transformation has happened in the North East here over the last seven and a half years.
He added “And so you just can’t understand and that is why I am saying they have mortgaged your future because that money, it is not them who will are going to pay it, people are celebrating their 80th birthday and Ghana is and Ghana is owning 650 billion, you think they are going to pay the 650 billion? Who is going to pay? You those sitting here, you the young people, that debt they had left is a debt for you to come and pay.”