General News of Monday, 24 September 2012

Source: Daily Guide

NDC blows $1m on enemies

The ruling National Democratic Congress (NDC) appears to have spent over $1million of the taxpayers’ money on hounding political opponents.

The money included an amount of $686,000 given to a supposed 'Professional Group' aligned to the NDC contracted by the Mills/Mahama administration, to hound perceived 'enemies' of the government for their roles in the Ghana@50 celebrations.

This was after a High Court discharged the two members of the previous New Patriotic Party (NPP) administration, Kwadwo Okyere Mpiani and Dr. Charles Wereko-Brobbey, on charges of willfully causing financial loss to the state.

A letter from the desk of deputy Attorney General and Minister for Justice Ebo Barton-Oduro to the Finance Ministry, is calling for the payment of the money to the shadow NDC group.

Apart from the actual contract sum which was $70,000, the group was also paid daily allowance of $2,000, bringing payment to $686,000.

The group's membership is not known but it is believed to be made up of NDC members of which one was recently elected to stand as a parliamentary candidate for the ruling party in the Volta Region, after defeating a minister of state and incumbent MP.

Comprising NDC lawyers assembled by the Attorney General, they were paid the sum to enable them look for enough grounds to specifically prosecute former Chief of Staff, Kwadwo Okeyere Mpiani who was Chairman of the Ghana@50 celebrations and Dr. Wereko-Brobeey, Chief Executive Officer (CEO).

A letter dated April 26, 2012 and authored by a Deputy Attorney General and Minister of Justice, Ebo Barton-Oduro, who has been at the center of payment of a number of controversial judgment debt, is authorizing payment from the Minister of Finance and Economic Planning. The letter stated that the payment was in 'respect to services rendered in the provision and procurement of jubilee toilets and sampled souvenirs for the Ghana@50 celebrations.”

it is this same 'Professional Group' whose dealings with the state are shrouded in secrecy that was paid a whopping $300,000 for a similar investigation into the infamous Isofoton case which also ended up in a mirage. Its advice to the state on the matter was ignored and payments effected courtesy of Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, a deputy Minister of Information, who lobbied for the Spanish company to get payments for alleged wrong abrogation of contracts.

Before they could even submit their final report on the Isofoton case, the office of the Attorney general had issued instructions for payment to be made to the company as judgment debt.

The contract agreement dated October 7, 2010 and entered between the state, represented by Barton-Oduro, and one E.D. Manful, described as Managing Consultant, and witnessed by one Elikplim Agbemava, a lawyer at the Ministry of Justice and Mercy Akyeampong, a Secretary to the 'Professional Group', stated among others, things that the client (state) shall provide to the consultant (Professional Group) such as a list of cases to be periodically investigated by the consultant, with timeliness for completion as greed between both parties.”

Apart from that, the Professional Group was also required to provide the state all “reasonable support as may be deemed necessary for reasons of confidentiality, security, expeditious dispatch of assignments, legal requirement, and propriety.”

For the sake of secrecy, it was also required to, as it were, “handover to the client (state) all reports prepared in the course of each assignment and shall not keep any working papers and reports relating to the assignments on account of confidentiality and sensitivity but shall turn such materials over to the client.”