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The service was established to replace the Gold Coast Civil Service. [2] The mission of the Civil Service, as stated in the Civil Service Law, 1993 PNDCL 327, “is to assist the Government in the formulation and implementation of government policies for the development of the country.” The following have occurred since the inception of the ...
Robert Nii Djan Dodoo (1934-2014) was a Ghanaian civil servant. [1] He was Head of the Civil Service from 1994 to 2001 during Jerry Rawlings civilian rule. [2] He had served previously as executive director of the Price and Incomes Board. [3] After Rawlings exit from the presidency, he was accused and faced trial for financial loss to the state.
The National Liberation Council (NLC) led the Ghanaian government from 24 February 1966 to 1 October 1969. The body emerged from a coup d'état against the Nkrumah government carried out jointly by the Ghana Police Service and Ghana Armed Forces with collaboration from the Ghana Civil Service.
He retired from the Civil Service in October 1979, prior to the coming into office of the Limann civilian administration. [17] In 1979, Boahene was appointed a director on the board of directors at the Ghana Italy Petroleum company (GHAIP) now Tema Oil Refinery. [18] In October 1998 he went into private law at Oboyang Chambers. [2]
After the 1948 Accra riots, the Coussey Committee incorporate the setting up of the Public Services Commission to train professionals in the African Civil Service. [2] The constitution drafted in 1951 included clauses that granted the commission the opportunity to provide non-binding advisory services to the Governor-General in the personnel ...
Robert Kweku Atta Gardiner (29 September 1914 – 13 April 1994) was a Ghanaian civil servant, university professor, and economist who served as the Executive Secretary of the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa from January 1962 until October 1975, and as the Commissioner for Economic Planning of Ghana from October 1975 until May 1978.
Quao joined the foreign service of the Ghanaian civil service in 1959, becoming a career diplomat and civil servant in Belgrade, Ottawa and Paris and as Counsellor to Ghana's Permanent Mission to the United Nations in New York City. [2] [3] [6] Later on, he was appointed the Principal Secretary at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 1966. [2] [3]
Joseph Arthur Ankrah (18 August 1915 – 25 November 1992) was a Ghanaian army general who was the second head of state of Ghana from 1966 to 1969 as chairman of the National Liberation Council. He was Ghana's first military head of state.