According to BBC News,
Ghana's Deputy Communications Minister Victoria Hammah has been sacked
after she was recorded allegedly saying she would stay in politics until
she has made $1m (£600,000).
"If you have money then you can control people," she seems to say
on the tape which has been widely circulated. Ms Hammah has not yet
commented on the tape or her sacking. The BBC's Sammy Darko in Accra
says she played a key role in President John Mahama's election last
year.
Some pundits will feel vindicated over her sacking, as they warned that
she was too young and inexperienced to serve in government, our
correspondent says.
In August, she said there was a lot of pressure on her to steal public
money because people thought that, as a minister, she was rich. She
described such demands as "obnoxious", reports the Ghanaweb news site.
"Corrupt politicians are the reflection of [a] corrupt society!" it
quotes her as saying.
Ms Hammah first came to the public attention after stumbling several
times while making a speech and then saying she had been given the wrong
text. On the tape, which has not been independently verified, she says:
"I will not quit politics until I make one million dollars." She also criticising another deputy minister, calling her "senseless, ugly, loud and egoistic". Information Minister Mahama Ayariga did not give any reason for Ms Hammah's dismissal in her one-sentence announcement.
But it comes 24 hours after the tape went viral on social media and was
played on a local radio station. Her driver has been arrested on
suspicion of making the recording of her conversation. Our correspondent
says many Ghanaians are asking if her right to privacy was infringed by
the release of the tape.
*I hope Nigerian politicians are watching and learning...because
Ghanaians are clearly showing them how to be a giant of Africa and also
be a good leader.


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