Martin Amidu - former Attorney General
Posted on: www.dailyguideghana.com
By
William Yaw Owusu
Thursday, January 30, 2014
The Supreme Court has adjourned to March 18, the
case in which former Attorney General Martin ABK Amidu is seeking a review of
the judgement delivered by the court in respect of Alfred Agbesi Woyome, Waterville Holdings and Austro Invest Management.
The court on Friday, June 14, 2013 had ordered Waterville
Holdings (BVI) Limited of P. O. Box 3444 Road Town, Tortola, British Virgin
Islands to refund a whooping €25million paid by the National Democratic
Congress (NDC) government.
In his
suit, the former AG, who has come to be known as ‘Citizen Vigilante’, had asked
for 15 reliefs but the court granted five of those reliefs.
The reliefs
granted included “a declaration that the Agreement entitled Contract
for the Rehabilitation of a 40,000 Seating Capacity Baba Yara Sports Stadium in
Kumasi, Ghana entered into on 26th April 2006 between the state and is an
international business or economic transaction under Article 181(5) of the 1992
Constitution that could only have become operative and binding on the
Government of Ghana after being laid before and approved by Parliament.”
Also a declaration that the Agreement entitled
“Contract for the Rehabilitation of a 40,000 Seating Capacity Ohene Djan Sports
Stadium and the Upgrading of the El Wak Stadium in Accra, Ghana” entered
into on 26th April 2006 between the Republic of Ghana and Waterville is an
international business or economic transaction under Article 181(5) of the 1992
Constitution that could only have become operative and binding on the
Government of Ghana after being laid before and approved by Parliament.”
The nine-member panel presided over by Justice Samuel Kofi Date-Bah, now retired, had held that the two agreements without being laid before and approved by Parliament was inconsistent with and in contravention of Article 181(5) of the 1992 Constitution and consequently null, void and without operative effect whatsoever.
The court granted that the conduct of Waterville in
making a claim for and securing payment through mediation on an alleged
breach of contract of the said two Agreements between it (a wholly foreign
company) and the Government of Ghana when it knew that the agreements had not
been approved, was inconsistent with and in contravention of the Constitution.
The case was scheduled for yesterday but it could
not be heard because sources say the composition of the panel was still not
complete and also the judges needed more time to assess the case.
Alfred A. Woyome
Both Mr. Amidu who is the appellant/applicant and
Mr. Woyome one of the defendants in the initial suit were in court.
Mr. Amidu who normally represents himself in the
case, and Osafo Buaben, counsel for Mr. Woyome were called to chambers and they
returned with the information on the adjournment.
Details of the review filed by Mr. Amidu filed remain
sketchy but Daily Guide gathered that the former AG wants the court to order
Mr. Woyome to also refund any amount paid to him in respect of the agreement
which the court had already declared unconstitutional.
Apart from Justice Date-Bah, other justices who sat
on the initial case were Julius Ansah, Sophia O. Adinyira, Rose C. Owusu, Jones
Victor Dotse, Paul Baffoe-Bonnie, Kwasi Anin-Yeboah, Sulley Nasiru Gbadegbe and
Vida Akoto Bamfo.
Writer's email: yawowusu74@gmail.com
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