Security Recruitment: Successful Armed Forces Applicants Directed to Report to Training Centres

Security Recruitment: Successful Armed Forces Applicants Directed to Report to Training Centres

  • The Ghana Armed Forces has issued appointment letters to the first batch of successful recruits for the 2025/2026 recruitment exercise across all 16 regional capitals
  • The new update included the exact dates for recruits to report to their respective training centres, ensuring clarity ahead of the commencement of training
  • Meanwhile, internal security service applicants have been urged to keep screenshots of their qualified portal status as proof in case of any technical hitches

The Ghana Armed Forces has issued appointment letters to the first batch of successful applicants for the 2025/2026 recruitment exercise across all 16 regional capitals.

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Ghana Armed Forces issues appointment letters, recruits report to training centres on March 27, 2026. Image credit: Ghana Armed Forces/Facebook
Source: Facebook

According to an official statement published on the Ghana Armed Forces’ Facebook page on March 19, 2026, the recruits are expected to report to their respective training centres on Friday, March 27, 2026.

“The first batch of potential recruits for the 2025/2026 recruitment exercise into the Ghana Armed Forces has been issued appointment letters across all 16 regional capitals, with instructions to report to their respective training centres on Friday 27 March 2026,” the statement read.

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This development marks a key step in the recruitment process, ensuring that selected candidates are formally guided on reporting procedures and timelines for the commencement of their training.

Read the Facebook details below.

Security analyst criticises Muntaka over recruitment

Also, renowned security analyst Richard Kumadoe has issued a strong critique of the Minister of Interior and Asawase Member of Parliament, Mubarak Mohammed Muntaka, over the centralised recruitment exercise for Ghana’s security services.

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Richard Kumadoe criticises the Interior Minister’s involvement in the four security services recruitment process. Image credit: Richard Kumadoe/LinkedIn, Ministry of Interior/Facebook
Source: UGC

Renowned security analyst Richard Kumadoe has sent a strong message to the Minister of Interior, who also doubles as the Member of Parliament for Asawase, Muntaka Mubarak Mohammed, over the centralised recruitment exercise for Ghana’s security services.

Speaking during an interview with JoyNews TV on Thursday, March 12, 2026, Kumadoe, a seasoned fraud prevention expert and security consultant, urged the Minister to step aside and allow the four security agencies, the Ghana Police Service, Ghana Immigration Service, Ghana Prison Service, and Fire Service, to manage their recruitment independently.

Kumadoe expressed concern over the minister’s approach to the recruitment process.

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"When you look at it, the government has not really spent any money but has charged the people. I think when it comes to refunding the money, the Minister of Interior should be available enough to answer that question," he stated.

He added:

"It was the language the minister used, the approach, and the process he set in place that has created this uproar. This is leading to miscommunication and misleading information."

Kumadoe strongly advised that political interference in operational recruitment processes should end:

"I am urging the minister to step aside and allow the agencies to do their recruitment. Getting involved as a minister without operational competencies while providing oversight responsibilities has created problems for the government, himself, and the entire system."

Watch the full YouTube interview below.

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Four Key advise for Interior Minister Muntaka

During the interview, Kumadoe outlined four key recommendations for Minister Muntaka

1. Kumadoe insisted that the minister’s words have been inconsistent and incoherent, causing confusion among applicants and the public. He emphasised that alignment with recruitment goals is crucial.

"Minister Muntaka must stop speaking because his words are inconsistent and not aligned with the expectations of applicants. Clarity and coherence are essential for public trust," Kumadoe said.

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2. He urged the minister to step back and allow the security agencies to undertake their recruitment independently, warning that political interference undermines standard procedures.

"The minister should remove himself from the process and let each agency carry out its recruitment. Interference only jeopardises transparency and operational integrity," Kumadoe stated.

3. Kumadoe called for a clear separation between political officeholders and recruitment, stressing that no politician should influence selection into the security services.

"Let’s make it a point that no politician is involved in recruitment. Political interference compromises fairness and accountability in our security institutions," he argued.

4. Finally, he stressed that applying standard recruitment procedures, as practised in other jurisdictions, would prevent disputes, miscommunication, and public distrust.

"Let standard procedures be applied across all agencies. Following established protocols ensures fairness and prevents the problems we are currently witnessing," Kumadoe concluded.

Service recruitment: Security Analyst criticises minority's comment

Kumadoe also aimed at the minority party, questioning the basis of their comments and framing them as politically motivated rather than rooted in procedural concern.

"When they were in power, how much were they selling the application forms? What were the backgrounds of those they recruited into the service? They have no moral authority to critique the process now," Kumadoe said, emphasising that their intervention comes solely from political interest.

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While he acknowledged concerns over the number of applications sold over 500,000 and the planned recruitment of just 5,000 candidates, Kumadoe stressed that the minority’s criticisms ignore historical precedent.

He maintained that procedural fairness and adherence to standard recruitment protocols, not political point-scoring, should guide the debate.

"The issue isn’t just the numbers; it’s about allowing the agencies to apply proper procedures. Political grandstanding only clouds the conversation and undermines confidence in the system," he added.
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A woman shares strategic advice with security service applicants awaiting their aptitude test results to keep screenshots for security. Image credit: Ghana Police Service/Facebook
Source: UGC

Applicants urged to screenshot aptitude test results

Earlier, YEN.com.gh reported that as several applicants across the country await the publication of their aptitude test results, a popular Ghanaian content creator, Dora Esinam, stepped in with firm and timely guidance.

In a Facebook post on March 4, 2026, the official date communicated by the government for the commencement of result publication, she urged candidates to act swiftly and strategically when checking up on the CSERP portal.

Dora Esinam advised security service applicants to immediately take a screenshot as soon as their status showed 'qualified', ensuring that their identification details were clearly captured in the image for added safety.

Source: YEN.com.gh

Authors:
Ruth Sekyi avatar

Ruth Sekyi (Entertainment Editor) Ruth Esi Amfua Sekyi is a Human Interest Editor at YEN.com.gh with 4+ years' experience across radio, print, TV, and digital media. She holds a B.A. in Communications (PR) from UNIMAC-IJ. Her media career began at Radio GIJ (campus radio), followed by Prime News Ghana. At InstinctWave, she worked on business content, playing major role in events organized by the company. She also worked with ABC News GH, updating their site, served as Production Assistant. In 2025, Ruth completed the ECOWAS, GIZ, and MFWA Information Integrity training. Email: ruth.sekyi@yen.com.gh