Posted on: www.dailyguideghana.com
By William Yaw Owusu
Friday, October 24, 2014
Nana
Agyei Ampofo, the immediate-past Chairman of the Lands Commission has said
former President John Agyekum Kufuor did not err in approving compensation for the
various communities whose lands were inundated by floods following the
construction of the Akosombo Hydro Electric Dam in the 1960s
According
to the legal practitioner, President Kufuor had acted based on information
passed to his cabinet by all relevant state institutions including
investigative bodies and cannot be said to have acted wrongly.
Nana
Agyei Ampofo flanked by Nana Ato Dadzie a former Chief of Staff who is his
lawyer was testifying at the Commission of Enquiry investigating the payment of
judgement debts, presided over by Justice Yaw Apau of the Court of Appeal.
Nana Ato
Dadzie is also the lawyer for Betty Mould-Iddrisu, former Attorney General and
Minister of Justice who might also appear before the commission for approving
dodgy judgement debts to individuals and organizations including Alfred Agbesi
Woyome.
The
Commission has few weeks to wind up public sitting and its expected the Ms
Mould-Iddrisu would be summon to tell the commission what she shows about the
questionable payments.
Cabinet Approval
Cabinet,
in July 2008, approved a consolidated amount of compensation totaling GH¢138 million
for various stools/families in Pai, Apaaso, Makango, Ahmandi and Kete Krachi
Traditional Areas and about 57 groups were said to have benefited from the
amount.
Records
at the commission revealed that GH¢71 million has been paid so far to the
various claimants and the disbursement of the remaining GH¢67million has been
put on hold to enable the government deal with discrepancies in the payments.
Records
at the commission indicate that most of the processes for compensation were
done between 2004 and 2008 even though some claims dated back to the 1970s but
the actual payments started in 2009.
The
Sole-Commissioner has variously expressed shock at how the Lands Commission
could proceed to order the release of the various amount of money to the
claimants based on the documents the witnesses are tendering before the
commission.
He did
not understand why communities that were resettled by the government in the
1960s, given communal lands and paid compensation for crops destroyed by the
Volta River floods could turn around to claim compensation almost 50 years
later.
Nana’s
testimony
Nana Agyei Ampofo told the commission
that as Chairman of Lands Commission he was not involved in the processing of
the documents for the claimants since it happened before he was appointed but
admitted that he was paid as solicitor for one of the claimants.
“I was
engaged in 1987 by Nana Kwaku Anokye, Omanhene of Adjaade Traditional Area. When
I assumed duty on August 21, 2009, the processing of their application had been
done and completed and the first release for the payment had been made before I
became Chairman,” he said.
“When I
was in office, there was no processing and the payments were made by the Land Valuation
Division of the commission,” adding “I never authorized any payment.”
When
asked by the Sole-Commissioner to explain the reason by some of the claimants
requesting that 15 percent of each claimant’s entitlement be deducted and put
in a reimbursable account to help facilitate speedy payment of the outstanding
claims, the former chief said a memo on the issue came before him.
“Leaders
of the claimants appeared before me with the then head of the Valuation
Division and believing upon reasonable grounds that they were leaders of all
the groups and after considering all the money due to be paid as their own
money I agreed that the deduction was legitimate and deduction could be made,”
he said.
“The
money had been approved and the state had indicated how they were to be paid in
tranches. I asked them what they were trying to facilitate and they said that
between them there were often some disagreements which delayed further
movements so they decided that when they had the 15 percent they would use it
to settle disputes and discrepancies between themselves,” he added.
He said
he checked to know all the leaders had consented to the deduction that was to
be made saying “I was satisfied that those who appeared before me represented
all sections of the claimants.”
He said
he did not do further checks as the commissioner on his former client’s case
because he knew Adjaade, lands were owned by families and not the stool.
“In fact,
the approval had been made before I assumed office after it had been vetted by the
SFO, AG and the sector minister and President Kufuor sitting in cabinet had
approved it. The first tranche had been released by the Ministry of Finance and
under my chairmanship, I didn’t approve any payment.”
He said
the body tasked to investigate irregularities in the payment had made bogus
findings against him saying “I thought that if they had spent even five minutes
to talk to me they wouldn’t have fallen into an error and go ahead to conclude
that during my time I engaged in improper conduct.”
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