By Prince Ahenkorah
The Ministry of the Interior has issued an unusual public warning to applicants in the ongoing security services recruitment drive, acknowledging that fraudsters have infiltrated the process with demands for mobile money payments a sign of the systemic vulnerabilities that continue to plague state hiring exercises.
In a statement released ahead of the medical screening phase, the ministry declared that any request for payment via MoMo is fraudulent. It further noted that SMS notifications regarding the next stage have not yet been sent; those are scheduled for 29–31 March, with screenings to commence on 7 April at designated centres nationwide.
The caution underscores a persistent challenge for Ghana’s security sector. Recruitment exercises, often highly competitive and opaque, have repeatedly attracted intermediaries who promise placements in exchange for unofficial fees.
The ministry’s insistence that payments will only be processed through a secure web checkout—and not to individuals or mobile money accounts—suggests an attempt to centralise and formalise a process that has historically been susceptible to rent-seeking.
Applicants are instructed to monitor the official recruitment portal, where statuses will update from “Qualified” to “Medical Screening” once formal communications are issued. Authorised messages will carry the sender ID CSERP, a detail the ministry clearly hopes will help distinguish legitimate instructions from the growing volume of fake alerts.
The public has been directed to report suspicious activity to recruitment@mint.gov.gh, an acknowledgment that enforcement will depend as much on applicant vigilance as on institutional controls.
With recruitment scams on the rise exploiting both high unemployment and the perceived value of state jobs the ministry’s warning may be as much about managing expectations as it is about deterring fraud.
