When Ghana established the Office of the Special Prosecutor (OSP) in 2018, it was heralded as a bold innovation in our anti-corruption architecture a promise to insulate justice from political interference and finally hold the powerful accountable. Seven years on, that promise hangs by a thread.
The resignation of Martin Amidu in 2020, citing political meddling, was the first crack in the façade. His successor, Kissi Agyebeng, entered office in 2021 with lofty rhetoric about a “new dawn.”
Yet four years later, the OSP has become more a theatre of pronouncements than a house of prosecutions. Not a single major conviction has been secured. Instead, headlines abound, investigations are announced, and credibility erodes.
Recent controversies claims of assassination attempts, allegations of police brutality, and the Interior Ministry’s swift rebuttals have deepened public skepticism. Internally, the office is bleeding talent, plagued by resignations, leaks, and factionalism. Its reliance on media spectacle rather than prosecutorial rigor has alienated allies and undermined its professional standing.
The OSP’s defenders point to resource constraints and entrenched political resistance. These are real challenges.
But excuses cannot substitute for results. An anti-corruption body that cannot deliver convictions risks becoming a cautionary tale, another failed experiment in Ghana’s long struggle against graft.
With its mandate set to expire in 2028, the OSP stands at a crossroads. Renewal should not be automatic. It must be earned through demonstrable competence, institutional discipline, and independence from political crossfire. Agyebeng and his team must recalibrate prioritizing evidence over rhetoric, prosecutions over press conferences, and credibility over spectacle.
Ghanaians deserve more than symbolic gestures in the fight against corruption. The OSP was created to be a prosecutorial authority, not a public relations outfit. Unless it rediscovers its core mission, it will collapse under the weight of its own contradictions—and with it, another opportunity to confront the rot that undermines our democracy.
