A government publication lists a number of political appointees and executives who did not submit their asset declarations on time as required under President Mahama’s March–May 2025 deadline:
(Note: this is from published records as of mid‑April 2025 — and details may be updated or expanded with official release of the full list.)
Presidential and Government Staff (examples of defaults as of April 17, 2025):
- Some presidential staffers highlighted in official documents had asset declaration dates pending or late as of the reporting period (names in public asset declaration tables marked as not yet declared by that date).
Unfortunately, the full official list of all defaulters was not publicly released by the government at the time of reporting, so specific names beyond the partial list of presidential staff and appointees who had declared — versus those who hadn’t — are not available yet.
What the Government Has Said
- President Mahama set strict deadlines for asset declarations for all appointees — including ministers, officials, and presidential staff — first by March 31, 2025, then a final cut‑off of May 7, 2025 with dismissal for non‑compliance.
- Those who missed this faced salary forfeiture and possible removal from office, though data on who exactly was sanctioned has not been fully published.
Key Takeaway
There is confirmation of a list of defaulters being compiled — and many high‑ranking officials did miss deadlines — but the complete public list of executives who failed to declare assets after Mahama’s warning isn’t currently in the public domain. Further official publication is expected to clarify the full roster of individuals who defaulted.


