Find Alternative Funding For Sports -Akufo-Addo Charges GOC

Mr Ben Nunoo-Mensah, President of the GOC, presenting a package to President Akufo-Addo

Find Alternative Funding For Sports -Akufo-Addo Charges GOC

President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has charged the Ministry of Youth and Sports to come up with plans and policies that will help bridge the funding gap for sporting disciplines in the country within the next six months.

He suggested that businesses and corporate organisations that supported sporting activities could be given some incentives such as tax reliefs since the government alone could not shoulder the burden of funding sports in the country.

According to the President, that was the surest way to garner support from the private sector since it dominated the country’s economy.

“While I will encourage parastatals to help with the development of our sports, the biggest support could come from the private sector since they dominate the economy.

“But we as a government and as administrators need to entice them and also change their mindset about the returns they can get from their investment in sports,” he added.

Event

President Akufo-Addo was speaking during a courtesy call on him by the newly elected executive of the Ghana Olympic Committee (GOC) at the Jubilee House.

The GOC also introduced its new executive to the President and discussed issues pertaining to the committee’s plan for sports.

The committee also presented a proposed budget for Ghana’s participation in the 2020 Olympic Games in Tokyo which had been rescheduled for this year due to the outbreak of the coronavirus pandemic last year.

Sponsorship

For his part, the President of the GOC, Ben Nunoo-Mensah, entreated parastatals such as the GCB Bank, Ghana Oil (GOIL), the Bulk Oil Storage and Transportation Company Limited (BOST), Ghana Gas and the Consolidated Bank of Ghana to adopt the various national sporting teams.

He said such support was crucial because the budgetary allocation to the Ministry of Youth and Sports was not enough to adequately fund sports and youth development programmes, especially, athletics which is among the “so-called least financed sports”.

Mr Nunoo-Mensah also advocated an annual or biennial sports competition among state agencies, a measure he said could lead to the agencies employing some of the athletes as was done in the past.

Also present at the meeting were the Executive Secretary to the President, Nana Asante Bediatuo; the Secretary-General of the GOC, Mr Mohammed Sahnoon; and the Deputy Secretary-General of the GOC, Mr Jerry Ahmed Shaib.

By Jackson Odom Kpakpo