GJA can’t cede the Press Center to the NMC

GJA can’t cede the Press Center to the NMC

Gayheart Mensah

Aspiring President of the Ghana Journalist Association (GJA), Gayheart Mensah has opposed a draft, unsigned MOU which will see the GJA handing over the Press Center to the National Media Commission.

The said MOU which has the Ministry of Information, the Ghana Journalists Association (GJA), National Media Commission (NMC), and the Right to Information Commission (RTIC) as the intended signatories if seen through will see the GJA surrender the Press Center to the Ministry of Information for the construction of an office complex. After this edifice is completed, the NMC will hold ownership on behalf of the government, “making journalists tenants in their own house.”

Below is the full release:

Gayheart Mensah, aspiring GJA President

My attention has been drawn to a draft, unsigned MOU, with the Ministry of Information, the Ghana Journalists Association (GJA), National Media Commission (NMC) and the Right to Information Commission (RTIC) as the intended signatories. At the center of the MOU is the future of our Press Center. I pray that the MOU remains a draft and unsigned for a while. This is because the content of the MOU has far-reaching implications for the GJA and could define the future of our association in various respects. It therefore needs to be thoroughly and extensively discussed.

For those who are relatively new to the GJA (I have been a member for 33 years now) the Press Center is what I characterize as “the GJA’s long walk to freedom”. It has been a tortuous journey with which I have been associated – from the Ghana Institute of Journalism (GIJ) to the Mortuary Road, Kokomlemle, and then to the bold intercessions by H.E. Kabral Blay Amihere and Mrs. Gifty Affenyi Dadzie, which eventually found us where we are today, thanks to President J. A. Kufuor. The Press Center, as it is set out now, represents the very soul and identity of journalism in this country. Since Mrs. Affenyi Dadzie secured the facility for us, it has not seen any significant addition or improvement. Indeed, it is deteriorating. That cannot continue. We definitely need a facelift.

However, the terms in the draft MOU are very worrying. The expectation that journalists “surrender” the Press Center to the Ministry of Information for the construction of an office must be of concern to all journalists. Even more worrying is the fact that per the MOU, the GJA is the institution that made such a proposal to government. As if these are not disconcerting enough, the GJA is expected to cede ownership of the Press Center to the NMC, which would hold ownership on behalf of the government. This means that when the office is constructed on our facility, we will become tenants (in our own house) to the NMC!

Let me state that I agree in principle on the need for a facelift for the Press Center. However, I am apprehensive about the terms spelt out in the draft MOU. I will humbly advise as follows:

  1. Any effort at redeveloping the Press Center must go through the required due process for approval. It should be thoroughly discussed at the various levels and structures of the GJA, both formal and informal, before a firm decision is made. Besides, this is a move that must be ratified by an AGM of the GJA. Such an enterprise cannot proceed without an extensive stakeholder engagement.

These, I am persuaded, are our emergencies of the moment. Let us focus on these and thread cautiously with regard to the draft MOU on the Press Center’s redevelopment.



Gayheart Mensah
Presidential Aspirant, GJA

November 23 2021

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