Posted on: www.dailyguideghana.com
By
William Yaw Owusu & Rebecca Adwoa Solomon
Thursday, July 24, 2014
The office of the Attorney General has recommended
sanctions for public officials cited in a report by a professional group that
was tasked to look into the Volta Basin resettlement programme.
The AG after analyzing the report wrote a letter on
July 11, 2014 to the Commission of Enquiry investigating the payments of
judgement debts, stating her position on the report released by the independent
professional group.
The professional group investigated the entirety of
the resettlement programme including payment of compensation after the Akosombo
Dam was constructed over the Volta River.
Dorothy Afriyie-Ansah, a Chief State Attorney
appearing before Sole Commissioner Justice Yaw Apau yesterday said “the AG’s
office is of the view that the report be forwarded to other agencies under the
ministry for further investigations.”
She said the AG wants the police to build dockets
for public officials mentioned in the report.
The AG’s advice also had a bearing on the directive
given by the same office (AG) where the Land Valuation Board now Land Valuation
Division of the Lands Commission was given the power to pay compensation directly
to the traditional authorities instead of Administrator of Stool Lands.
Then Attorney-General, Joe Ghartey, through a letter
signed in 2008 by eminent jurist Justice VCRAC Crabbe, gave the mandate to the
Land Valuation Board to be in charge of such compensation payments, a move, the
Administrator of Stool Lands described as unconstitutional.
Since the directive, there have been sharp
disagreements between officials of the Land Valuation Division and the
Administrator of Stool Lands over the compensation for lands even though
provisions of Article 267 (2) of the 1992 constitution mandated Stool Lands to
act in that capacity.
Justice Apau advised that following the AG’s letter
to the commission, the AG should write back to Lands Commission to establish
which authority should be in charge of the distribution of compensation.
In the commission’s view, the constitutional
provision was unambiguous and there was no need for the AG to issue that
directive.
Earlier, senior state attorney for the Ministry of
Finance and Economic Planning, Sarah Fafa-Kpodo had requested for an adjournment
to enable the ministry search for documents in a case in which the government
was sued by two people who were involved in a lorry accident.
No comments:
Post a Comment