Posted on: www.dailyguideghana.com
By
William Yaw Owusu
Wednesday, June 18, 2014
The Ministry of Food and Agriculture (MoFA) appears
not to be aware of $2.6million compensation payment to the Carmichael Family in
respect of the Aveyime Livestock project in the Volta Region.
Seth Mensah Dumoga, Head of Legal at the ministry yesterday
told the Commission of Enquiry Investigating the payment of judgement debts
that he had not heard about the Carmichael Family or Christopher Michel who
were said to have been paid the amounts.
He admitted that the government acquired the cattle
ranch through an Executive Instrument and evidence before the commission
indicated that a whopping $2.4million and additional $240,000 were paid to the
claimants for the acquisition.
Kwadwo Awua-Peasah, the Director in
charge of External Resource Mobilization (Bilateral) at the Ministry of Finance
and Economic Planning had already confirmed the payment and said done in two
tranches totaling about GH¢2.6million.
Payment
Instruction
Mr. Awua-Peasah had said it was eminent jurist
Justice V.C.R.A.C. Crabbe who wrote a letter on the instructions of the
President on January 6, 2009 to release the money to the Carmichael Family.
He said documents available indicated that the first
payment of GH¢3.2million was authorized on April 28, 2009 while another amount
of GH¢530,628.44 was released as the final batch of payment on May 27, 2009.
The witness had further told Sole-Commissioner
Justice Yaw Apau of the Court of Appeal that the $240,000 was paid as solicitor
fees.
When Mr. Dumaoga appeared before the commission he
said land owners have started inundating the Ministry of Agriculture with
notices for compensation for the land used for the Aveyime Cattle Ranch
following news that the Carmichael Family was paid.
He said the workers at the ranch had not been paid
for over two years adding “about 200 cows and bulls are there now but the ranch
has ran down and we are in the process of dissolving it.”
He said the Aveyime Livestock Project is a limited
liability company but the government owned 100 percent shares and added that
the ministry was putting together all documents to assist the commission to unravel
the mystery surrounding the payment.
Mr. Dumoga also cleared the air on the payment of
GH¢340,000 to claimants who the commission said evidence available indicated
they were ‘unkown persons.’
He submitted a case file to the commission and said E.I.
24 covered the acquisition of 395.71 of July 26, 1995 from the Kokutse, Tettey
and Abla Families for an irrigation project in the Akuse area.
Earlier, Mr. Awua-Peasah also testified in the case
involving the payment of about ¢14billion to Togbe Sakplikpa III following the acquisition
of lands for the Accra Plains Agricultural Development in 1977.
Chief Valuer Kwesi K. Bentsi-Enchil also testified
in the matter and confirmed that they Land Valuation Division compiled an
evaluation report of the land.
Mrs Stella Badu, a Chief State Attorney representing
the Attorney General also testified in the Togbe Sakplikpa’s and said the AG
had agreed with the claimants to recommend the payment by November 2002 but
when the payment delayed the claimants sued.
“The court gave judgement on admission,” she said
and added that the claimants were paid and there was no indication the claimants
made complaints subsequent complaints about delays in the payment.
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