Gilbert Boafo Boahene

Gilbert Boafo Boahene (18 December 1924 – November 2016) was a Ghanaian civil servant who was Secretary to the Supreme Military Council, and also was Secretary to the Public Services Commission on two occasions; first in the First Republic and then in the Second Republic. He was the cabinet secretary of the S.M.C. government in Ghana at the time of its overthrow in the 1979 June 4th revolution.

Gilbert Boafo Boahene
Secretary to the Supreme Military Council & Head of the Civil Service
In office
1979–1979
PresidentF.W.K. Akuffo
Preceded byE.K. Minta
Deputy Secretary to the Supreme Military Council
In office
9 December 1976  1979
Principal Secretary to the Ministry of Defense
In office
1974–1976
PresidentI. Kutu Acheampong
MinisterI. Kutu Acheampong
Greater Accra Regional Administrative Officer
In office
1972–1974
PresidentI. Kutu Acheampong
Secretary to the Public Services Commission
In office
1963–1967
President
In office
1969–1972
Prime MinisterKofi Busia
Principal Secretary, Higher Education Division, Ministry of Education
In office
1967–1968
Personal details
Born
Gilbert Boafo Boahene

(1924-12-18)18 December 1924
Amanokrom, Gold Coast
DiedNovember 2016 (aged 91)
NationalityGhanaian
EducationAccra Academy[1]
Alma materUniversity College of the Gold Coast
Occupationpublic servant
Known forSecretary to the Supreme Military Council Cabinet[1]

Early life and education

Boahene was born on 18 December 1924 in Amanokrom. He started his primary education at Amanokrom Presbyterian Junior School and continued at Akropong Presbyterian Middle School popularly known as the Akropong Salem. He had his secondary education at the Accra Academy from 1941 to 1946. He studied at the University College of the Gold Coast for a B.A. in History degree from 1949 to 1954.[2]

Career

Boahene entered the administrative service as an Assistant Government Agent to the Kete-Krachi (Buem-Krachi) district in 1954, and was transferred to Keta in 1955. In 1955, he was put on appointment as Secretary to the Regional Officer in Ho and became the most ranking Gold Coast citizen in Trans-Volta Togoland.[3] He performed the duties of persuading people in the Buem-Krachi, Kpandu and Ho districts of British Togoland to be integrated into Ghana at the 1956 British Togoland status plebiscite, together with his administrative colleagues.[4] After which, in 1956, he became government agent to Jasikan and was sent again to Kete-Krachi in the same role after Ghana's Independence.[5]

After this period, he was attached to the High Commission of Ghana, London, and served as assistant director of Recruitment (Overseas) in the Ghana Civil Service.[6]

In 1963, he returned to the Establishment Secretariat in Ghana and was moved to the Ministry of Education as Principal Assistant Secretary. That same year in 1963, Boahene was posted on appointment as Secretary to the Public Services Commission chaired by K.G. Konuah,[7] until 1967 and returned to the Higher Education Division of the Ministry of Education.[8] He became principal secretary of the division in June 1968.[9] He served on various committees and boards.[10][11][12] Some of which are the councils of all three institutions of higher learning in Ghana which were; University of Ghana, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology and University of Cape Coast.[9]

In 1970 he was re-appointed secretary to the Public Services Commission, and in 1972 sent to the Greater Accra Regional Office as Regional Administrative Officer. In 1974 Boahene was appointed Principal Secretary at the Ministry of Defense whose ministerial oversight was retained by the military head of state, General Ignatius Acheampong.[13] In 1976 he was promoted to the grade of Senior Principal Secretary. That same year in July 1976, he was posted to the seat of government as Deputy Secretary to the Supreme Military Council in direct succession to the Secretary.[14][15][16] He was subsequently made Secretary of the Supreme Military Council cabinet, a position he briefly held prior to the June 1979 revolutionary coup d'état that overthrew the Supreme Military Council government. He retired from the Civil Service in October 1979, prior to the coming into office of the Limann civilian administration.[17] In 1979, Boahene was appointed a director on the board of directors at the Ghana Italy Petroleum company (GHAIP) now Tema Oil Refinery.[18]

He began studies at the Ghana School of Law in 1994. He was called to the Ghanaian bar in 1998 at the age of 74. In October 1998 he went into private law in Oboyang Chambers.[2]

Personal life

He married Christine Joyce Ayisi in 1958. Together, they had 3 children. He was the father-in-law of Okyehene Amoatia Ofori-Panyin II, Paramount chief of Akyem Abuakwa. He died in November 2016.[2]

References

  1. E.A. Osew (14 June 1997). "Tribute to SS Sackey". Daily Graphic: 9.
  2. Brochure: Gilbert Boafo Boahene. 2016. p. 5.
  3. Coast, Gold (1955). Gold Coast Gazette.
  4. Nugent, Paul (2002). Smugglers, Secessionists & Loyal Citizens on the Ghana-Toga Frontier: The Life of the Borderlands Since 1914. Ohio University Press, 2002. p. 238. ISBN 9780852554722.
  5. Ghana Gazette. 1961. p. 24.
  6. Great Britain. Office of Commonwealth Relations (1962). The Commonwealth Relations Office Year Book. H.M. Stationery Office, 1962. p. 49.
  7. Ghana Gazette. Government Printer, Accra. 1963.
  8. "Ghana Gazette". Government Printer, 1967. July 1967. p. 585.
  9. Report of the Commission of Enquiry Into the University College of Cape Coast. Ghana. Commission of Enquiry into the University College of Cape Coast, Republic of Ghana, 1970. 1970. p. 6.
  10. African Studies Newsletter. African Studies Center, University of California at Los Angeles. 1969.
  11. Report of the Committee of Experts to Advise on the Future of the Ghana Academy of Sciences, December, 1966: Presented to the National Liberation Council, January 1967. Ghana Information Services, 1967. 1967.
  12. Ghana Year Book. Daily Graphic. 1969.
  13. Report of the Joe Appiah Committee of Enquiry Into the Affairs of R.T. Briscoe (Ghana) Limited. Ghana Publishing Corporation, 1976. 1976. p. 47.
  14. Secretary, Ghana Supreme Military Council Office of the Press (1977). General Kutu Acheampong: The Fifth Milestone, 13th January 1976-12th January 1977. Office of the Press Secretary to the Supreme Military Council.
  15. Ghana Gazzette. Government Printer. 1978. p. 424.
  16. Nkrumah, I. K. (August 27, 1977). "Secretaial Training". Daily Graphic (8353): 8.
  17. "JSTOR: Search Results". www.jstor.org. Retrieved 2021-01-09.
  18. Financial Times Oil and Gas International Year Book. Longman Group, 1983. 1983. p. 169. ISBN 9780582903159.
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