EduWatch reacts to expired repackaged bags of rice distributed to SHSs

education sector

Africa Education Watch (EduWatch) has proposed that the government strengthen warehouse security, quality assurance and compliance systems in the delivery of food items to second-cycle schools across the country.

Reacting to allegations that expired 22,000 bags of rice had been repacked and distributed to public Senior High Schools, the Watch said the Ministry of Education (MoE) should be interested in the food supply chain.

EduWatch’s proposal comes after the Member of Parliament for North Tongu, Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, claimed 22,000 bags of expired and repackaged rice were distributed to Senior High Schools across the country in February this year.

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He alleged that the Buffer Stock storage facility in Kumasi, in the Ashanti region, was used to repackage expired rice brought from India, which expired in December 2023 but was repackaged into locally made sacks, “with the inscription ‘ECOWAS’, ‘Made in Ghana rice’, but without an expiry date.”

“The National Food Buffer Stock Company clearly conspired with a company known as Lamens Investments Africa Limited. They used the Buffer Stock storage facility in Kumasi, in the Ashanti region, to repackage expired rice.

This company brought in rice from India, the brand ‘Moshosho rice,’ which expired in December 2023. Upon realising the rice had expired, they conspired with the Buffer Stock company to use their premises for re-bagging.”

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Ablakwa further disclosed that the Ashanti Regional Police Command and the Food and Drugs Authority (FDA) in the region, upon receiving a tip-off, intercepted the food for investigation but it was later released for onward distribution.

“Can you believe that, before the test results arrived from the FDA in Accra on 6th February, an instruction came from above that the expired, contaminated rice should be distributed to the schools? So, as we speak, all 22,000 bags of rice that the police sought to confiscate have been sent to the schools,” he said.

In a related development, the Ministry of Education (MoE) has launched an investigation into the claim that expired 22,000 bags of rice have been repackaged and distributed across various second-cycle schools in the country.

The Education Ministry says it has engaged the National Food Buffer Stock Company (NAFCO) and the Ghana Commodity Exchange (GCX), the entities responsible for the supply and distribution of food to Senior High Schools.

“We assure students, parents, guardians, and the public of our commitment to protecting the health and safety of every student under our care.
Rest assured, we will pursue this matter to the end, and provide updates to the Public as our investigation progresses,” A statement signed by the spokesperson for the Ministry of Education, Kwasi Kwarteng stated.

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