Posted on: www.dailyguideghana.com
By William Yaw Owusu
Wednesday, November 26, 2014
A
witness who persistently denied knowledge of pre-financing activities in the Ghana
Youth Employment and Entrepreneurial Development Agency (GYEEDA) trial yesterday had hot exchanges with counsel for the
accused persons on trial.
Dr.
Shaibu Ahmed Gariba, former Director General of Management
Development and Productivity Institute (MDPI) testifying as the fifth
prosecution witness (PW5) did not want to accept the fact that there was a pre-financing
activity by Phillip Akpeena Assibit’s Goodwill International Group (GIG) even though
a letter already in evidence showed clearly he (witness) even endorsed it with
his signature.
Request letter
The
letter written on May 10, 2011 titled “Bank of Ghana Cheque Number 018931 from
NYEP” specifically directed the central bank to pay GH¢800,000 into a MDPI/GIG
Oil and Project account.
In
the said letter, the GIG and MDPI were said to have since 2009 been
collaborating in the provision of services to the NYEP (now GYEEDA) then headed
by MP for Chiana Paga, Abuga Pele who is on trial alongside Assibit for causing
financial loss to the state.
GH¢10million
The
GIG according to the letter had contract with the NYEP to prefund and deliver
Oil and Gas training for NYEP beneficiaries and as a result had prefunded
activities and sourced institutional support from the MDPI and effectually
delivered three modules of the oil and gas training.
The
letter jointly endorsed by the witness as Director General of MDPI and Assibit
as Management Consultant said the cheque represented a part payment for
training fees of nearly GH¢10million for 5,000 beneficiaries of the NYEP
accumulated over two years service and prefunding activities of NYEP by the GIG.
Abuga Pele faces witness
Dr.
Gariba during cross-examination by Abuga Pele’s counsel Karl Adongo told the
court that he could not attest to the fact that GIG pre-financed the oil and
gas training and said he was certain that “MDPI didn’t pre-finance anything.”
The
witness admitted that in all the agreements signed between MDPI and GIG, none
of the contracts had anything to do with Abuga Pele directely but insisted that
the NDC MP was involved indirectly because the NYEP sent participants for the
oil and gas training.
“In
the oil and gas training we did some work with GIG but we had no direct
dealings with A2 (Abuga Pele). We didn’t do any consultancy service with A2. They
only sent people to be trained under the oil and gas programme,” the witness
told the court presided over by Justice Afia Serwaa Asare-Botwe.
Assibit vrs Witness
Concluding
the cross-examination of the witness, Raymond Bagnabu representing Assibit had alleged
that the witness used a surveyor called Alhaji Sey to collect money from A1
(Assibit) for his private building project at Trade Fair Site, La, but Dr.
Gariba denied.
He
said the agreement between GIG and MDPI on the Youth Enterprise Development
(YED) project was signed was dependent on the arrival of the $65million from
the World Bank but when given a copy of the agreement and pushed by counsel to state
which part of the agreement said so, the witness said “It is not stated here
categorically.”
He
insisted that he did not know that GIG used MDPI personnel including Jamal and
Karim in their consultancy services and said the he heard about an office
called Project Resource Mobilization but never visited the said office.
Dr.
Gariba admitted travelling in the vehicle of GIG for field work but said it was
in respect of the oil and gas project which they were executing with Assibit’s
outfit and not the YED project.
He
said at the launch of Exit Plans for the NYEP at Alisa Hotel he delivered a
speech as MDPI official but it was the
media that misrepresented him after counsel had said the witness praised the
collaboration between his outfit and the GIG on the YED project.
Long adjournment
The
case was subsequently adjourned until February 23, next year for the
prosecution to bring its next set of witnesses.
So
far, Nuru Hamidan former NYEP Deputy National
Coordinator in charge of Operations and now MCE for Asokore Mampong, Gladys Ghartey current
Head of United Nations Systems at the Ministry of Finance and Economic
Planning, Mohammed Pelpuo, Head of the Business Development Unit at NYEP as
well as Clement Kofi Humado, former Minister of Youth and Sports have since
testified and cross-examined.
Accused persons
Abuga
Pele and Philip Akpeena Assibit are standing trial for the various roles they
played, which the Attorney General’s Department said caused huge financial loss
to the state.
The
MP is accused of wilfully 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. They were present in
court yesterday.
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