Posted on: www.dailyguideghana.com
By William Yaw
Owusu
Monday July 06,
2015
New Patriotic Party (NPP) flagbearer for the 2016 election, Nana
Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has given an indication to challenge the adverse
findings purportedly made against him by the Judgement Debt Commission headed
by the newly-appointed Supreme Court judge, Justice Yaw Apau.
According to Nana Asante Bediatuo, counsel for the NPP stalwart, they
had written to the Presidency to get a certified copy of Justice Apau’s leaked
report in order to seek redress in court without delay.
In leaked Sole-Commissioner’s report, Justice Apau is making adverse
findings against Nana Akufo-Addo whose tenure as Attorney-General, Ghana
National Petroleum Corporation (GNPC’s) Drill Ship Discoverer 511 was sold to
defray debts incurred by the Tsatsu Tsikata when he was the boss of the state-run
company.
The Justice Apau report on the drill ship has been described by
Journalist Abdul Malik Kweku Baako, Jnr as ‘voodoo’, virtually accusing the
sole commissioner of pandering to the propaganda whims of the ruling NDC
government.
The drill ship was disposed off by the Kufuor administration to
defray a $19.5 million judgment debt owed Societe-General Bank in 2001, the
Sole-Commissioner’s report concluded that Nana Akufo-Addo’s “miserable” failure
to defend the state in a London court led to a judgment debt higher than what
Ghana would have paid.
“This Commission holds the view that the payment of $19.5 million
instead of the $14 million earlier on agreed, constituted financial loss to the
Corporation and Ghana,” the leaked report concluded.
Interestingly, Justice Apau made the adverse finding even though he never
invited Nana Akufo-Addo to hear his side of the Drill Ship saga which took
larger chunk of the commission’s sitting, despite the fact that the NPP
flagbearer was on record to have volunteered to testify in the matter.
Huge Deficit
An incensed Nana Asante Bediatuo told Joy FM news analysis programme Newsfile last Saturday that although
Nana Akufo-Addo was yet to lay his hands on the original report, a cursory analysis
of what is contained in the leaked report “suffers from a huge deficit.”
“Let me also say that we have written formally to the commission,
copied the Chief of Staff at the Presidency for an official copy because we are
not sure what is floating around is it,” he said.
Giving reasons why his client has taken the court option, he said: “We
cannot allow a report to be hanging and government chooses not to issue a White
Paper so that the issues in the report become issues of fact and people can
talk about it and use it to exhale Akufo-Addo. That is wrong!”
Go To Court!
He said “I disagree with those saying that if a White Paper is not
issued then Akufo-Addo cannot go to court because every person under the
constitution has a right of access to the court especially when his human
rights are concerned, when we are talking about the rights of natural justice.”
Nana Asante Bediatuo said “the Commission is an inquisitorial
commission. It is not like our normal courts that employs the adversarial
process. So the Commission has a higher burden of investigating and
interrogating every issue that comes up and looking for evidence in support of
one particular fact or another.”
Commission Failed!
“I see that in this particular instance the commission has failed in
that endeavour. From what I have seen of the report, there is nothing about the
actual cause of this debt which is the original GNPC debt to SG and how it came
about and so on. There is a big lacuna there and I don’t understand that,” he
lamented.
He said that “it is important that even if you are an inquisitorial
commission, a person’s right to be heard should never be taken away.”
Apau’s ‘Innuendos’
He said that there was a lot of “innuendos” in the report and said “I
find quiet unfortunate because it seems to me that it doesn’t directly name
Akufo-Addo but gives innuendos that any person reading the report will
obviously attach the AG to a person Akufo-Addo and I think that is also
unfortunate.”
He explained that there were a lot of innuendos because for “he
mentions other people’s names directly and not their offices like he mentioned
KT Hammond and so on.”
“If they had called Akufo-Addo, perhaps the issue for example of why
he didn’t go to the London court which is an issue of discretion in the AG to
decide whether to go or not would have been adequately explained to full.”
‘Nonsense’ of a
report
Nana Asante Bediatuo said that “as a matter of first principle, the
denial of the right to be heard makes some bit of nonsense of the report.”
“It is also clear to us that it is not as though the commission had documents
or correspondence that made Akufo-Addo’s presence unnecessary but he does not
say so. Documents or correspondence in his own hands that clearly he could then
make some of these findings or even if he chose not invite him.”
He said that “if indeed this report about Akufo-Addo is to attack
his incorruptibility, I think it is futile, and I think people should stop
trying to do that. There is nothing in Akufo-Addo’s background, his profession
to suggest corruption. They should just give up.”
Vodoo Maths
Abdul Malik Kweku Baako, Editor-in-Chief of the New Crusading Guide and a regular panelist on Newsfile said the
Sole-Commissioner appeared to have engaged in what he called ‘Vodoo
Mathematics’ to conclude that Nana Akufo-Addo cause financial loss in the Drill
Ship saga.
He explained that the figures relied on to suggest that Ghana paid
larger amount than it would have were not calculated based on any concrete
evidence or even sound judgment.
Kweku Baako insisted that there was no evidence to back the claim
that the $14million was settled on to warrant a conclusion by Justice Apau that
the $19.5 million that was paid SG was $5.5 million more than ought to have
been paid, saying “this is voodoo mathematics.”
He read a memo purportedly written by a former Chief Executive of
the GNPC, Tsatsu Tsikata, addressed to Board of Directors of the Corporation in
1998 admitting that GNPC owed SG $40 million and the journalist said that the
decision of the London High court was not without basis and the burden could
not have been placed on the then A-G, Nana Akufo-Addo.
“Let Justice Apau and his Commission produce evidence to the effect
of this $14 million settlement agreement,” he dared the Sole Commissioner who
has suddenly been promoted to the Supreme Court upon completion of his
assignment.
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