Posted on: www.dailyguideghana.com
By
William Yaw Owusu
Wednesday, May 7, 2014
A senior officer at the Ministry of Finance and
Economic Planning yesterday told an Accra Financial Court that it was
impossible for the World Bank to give Ghana $65million for creation of jobs for
the youth without exhausting all laid down procedures for release of the funds.
Gladys Ghartey, current Head of United Nations
Systems at the Ministry insisted under cross examination at the Ghana Youth
Employment and Entrepreneurial Development Agency (GYEEDA) trial that it was
incorrect for anybody including then Vice President John Dramani Mahama to
announce that the $65million had been secured.
Give-And-Take
Counsel
(Raymond Bagnabu): What will be your reaction if you heard
that the $65million has been secured?
Witness:
My reaction will be that no such facility has been secured.
Counsel:
In fact, then Vice President, His Excellency John Dramani Mahama, announced
that $65million has been secured.
Witness:
It is incorrect.
Counsel:
Also, then Minister of Youth and Sports, Clement Kofi Humado at the
Meet-the-press series also announced that $65million has been secured.
Witness:
It is incorrect.
Counsel:
Are you saying that these officials were not telling the truth?
Witness:
They were not telling the truth…If any such facility is secured I am the first
person to know.
Accused
Persons
Incumbent Member of Parliament (MP) for Chiana-Paga,
Abuga Pele and Philip Akpeena Assibit, Chief Executive Officer of Goodwill
International Group (GIG), are standing trial for their various roles which the
Attorney General’s Department says had cost huge financial loss to the state.
Until last year, Abuga Pele was the National
Coordinator of National Youth Employment Programme (NYEP) now the GYEEDA.
He is accused of willfully causing financial loss to
the state to the tune of GH¢3,330,568.53 while Assibit is being tried for
defrauding the state of an amount equivalent to $1,948,626.68.
The two have pleaded not guilty and are currently on
bail.
Charges
The NDC MP is facing six counts of willfully causing
financial loss to the state under Section 179A (3) of the Criminal Offences
Act, 1960 Act 29, two counts of abetment under Sections 20(1) and 131(1) of the
Criminal Offences Act, 1960 (Act 29) and one count of intentionally misapplying
public property, contrary to Section 1(2) of the Public Property Protection
Act, 1977 (SMCD) 140.
Mr. Assibit, who is the first accused person on the
other hand, is facing six counts of defrauding by false pretences contrary to
Section 131(1) of the Criminal and Offences Act 1960 (Act 29) and five counts
of dishonestly causing loss to public property contrary to Section 2(1) of the
Public Property Protection Act, 1977 (SMCD) 140.
End
of Cross Examination
Concluding her cross examination, the second
prosecution witness (PW2) told the court presided over by Justice Afia
Asare-Botwe that information from the World Bank about receipt of the GYEEDA
proposal did not mark the beginning of her knowledge in the matter as counsel
was suggesting.
“I said in October 2010 we went for a World Bank
annual meeting in Washington and my minister had presented programmes to them
and it included the GYEEDA project,” Mrs. Ghartey insisted.
She said admitted that the GYEEDA concept paper to
create jobs was circulated among international donor agencies apart from the
World Bank but said she did not know how the concept paper originated.
Counsel:
It was developed and designed by A1 (Assibit) and his team.
Witness:
I would not know.
Counsel:
It originated as the NYEP had tasked A1 and his team to look for alternative
sources of funding for the project.
Witness:
I would not know.
Counsel:
A1 had done this with West Cap and it was in this quest that they went to the
office of then Vice President.
Witness:
I do not know.
Counsel then put it to the witness that it was
Assibit and his team that had urged then Vice President to approach the World
Bank and talk to them about funding for the project but Mrs. Ghartey said “I
was not there so I would not know.”
She said she was not in a position to know the
activities that had taken place before a letter of consent was written from
cabinet in support of securing funding for the project after counsel suggested
to her that Assibit had played a key role at that level.
PW2 told the court that Assibit did not present any
document to her in which the accused described himself as consultant but
insisted that it would be incorrect for anybody to suggest that Assibit and
another called Jamal had never personally visited her office.
Abuga
Pele’s turn
When Thaddeus Sory counsel for Abuga Pele took his
turn to cross examine the witness, she (Mrs.
Ghartey) admitted that all GYEEDA activities were supervised by the Ministry of
Youth and Sports.
She also said even though a Project Preparatory
Advance (PPA) was signed with the government at $4.5million, the money did not
come.
Sitting continues on May 21.
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