GACC trains journalists to report on Ghana corruption

Ghana's investigative journalism scene just got a serious skills injection, and the pressure is on reporters to actually show results in their coverage of corruption.

GACC trains journalists on governance and anti-corruption reporting
  • The Ghana Anti-Corruption Coalition, alongside the Africa Centre for Energy Policy and with backing from the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office, ran a one-day follow-up training session.
  • Journalists who went through the 2024 media capacity-building programme were the specific target group for this session.
  • Sharpening investigative skills and pushing analytical, corruption-focused reporting were the core goals on the table.
  • Journalists, editors, civil society organizations, and governance experts all got pulled into the room together.
GACC Executive Secretary Narteh holds journalists accountable
  • Beauty Emefa Narteh challenged participants to turn previously gained knowledge into reporting that actually moves the needle.
  • Accountability cuts both ways, she argued, and journalists need to deliver visible results when resources get poured into their development.
  • Narteh expressed confidence that tighter media-civil society collaboration would give Ghana's anti-corruption efforts a real boost.
Speakers break down the wider stakes
  • ACEP's Kodzo Yaotse stressed that equipping journalists to navigate technical sectors like extractives is critical, given how layered the corruption risks can get.
  • FCDO's Hooman Nouruzi flagged corruption as a direct threat to development, noting that an independent and ethical media remains one of the sharpest tools against it.
  • The Democracy Project's John Osae-Kwapong pointed to global governance indices showing Ghana's anti-corruption progress has stalled, with rising public perception of corruption and weak whistleblower protection.
  • Ghana Integrity Initiative's Mary Awelana Addah pushed journalists to prioritize documentation and collective advocacy, warning that silence actively erodes reform efforts.
GACC's broader anti-corruption journalism push
  • Programmes Officer Samuel Harrison-Cudjoe revealed that GACC has rolled out additional initiatives to back journalists covering governance and accountability beats.
  • Several landmark anti-corruption cases in Ghana were cracked open by investigative journalism, making this training more than just a workshop exercise.
 

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