Posted on:
www.dailyguideghana.com
By William Yaw
Owusu
Saturday, January
14, 2017
Former Attorney General Martin A.B.K. Amidu has claimed some
influential people and chiefs are trying to persuade new President Nana Addo
Dankwa Akufo-Addo not to prosecute perceived corrupt officials under the
previous Mahama administration.
He said President Akufo-Addo’s anti-corruption efforts would be
meaningless if he takes the path of reconciliation instead of probity and
accountability.
In a statement released recently, Mr. Amidu, who is a member of the
NDC and renowned for his anti-corruption exploits, said “I assure every
Ghanaian that the evidence of criminal and unconstitutional conduct is
overwhelming, but unconstitutional attempts are being made through influential
chiefs and elders to let bygones be bygones contrary to the demands of the Constitution
for accountability, transparency and fairness in governance.”
He accused the 6th Parliament of the 4th
Republic of assisting the previous Mahama administration to loot the country
and hoped that the current 7th Parliament will not attempt to
“compromise the President’s anti-corruption agenda in the name of
reconciliation.”
“The President’s anti-corruption drive will be still-born with such
compromises and reconciliations.”
While congratulating the new Speaker Prof. Mike Aaron Oqcuaye, the
former AG said “unlike previous elections in the annals of our history the
pivotal and critical issues were between electing a corrupt, bankrupt, inept,
incompetent, abusive, impudent, and Looter incumbent Government, and electing
one of the contesting candidates dedicated to fighting all these
unconstitutional capricious evils and protecting the national purse.”
He prayed that Ghana should never elect a President like John Mahama
because he is corrupt and had looted the country’s treasury.
“The massive thrashing of the incumbent Looter Government of John
Dramani Mahama (may God never give Ghana a corrupt and looter President like
him again) by the President Nana Akufo-Addo and the New Patriotic Party (NPP)
is a clear expression of the sovereign will of Ghanaians for accountability,
transparency and fairness in governance to all citizens without fear or
favour.”
He said Ghanaians voted against what he termed “patronage, cronyism,
ethnicity, and political party cryptocracy,” saying “Ghanaians, therefore,
expect and demand a total brake with the immediate past practices of the
parliaments which were reduced into appendages of the executive chariot in
looting the national purse.”
“Ghanaians have demanded and expect that the mandate of the 7th
Parliament will be consistent with the letter and spirit of the 1992
Constitution; and the promises by the President to protect the national purse
and be impartial in the governance of our dear country.”
“The promises of the President upon whose steam of anti-corruption
agenda the NPP in Parliament had such a beautiful majority, meets Citizens
Vigilance for Justice’s agenda of putting Ghana First,” adding “I dare say that
the reasonable number of members of Parliament returned and voted to the 7th
Parliament was the result of the electorate’s perception of their ability to
put Ghana First in holding the executive to account.”
He said that “the expectations of Ghanaians that the President and
the 7th Parliament would for the first time since 2009 indeed render selfless
service to the people of Ghana and not champion their corrupt self-interest and
their political party’s myopic corrupt self-interest was demonstrated by the
events that unfolded on Friday, 6th January 2017 at the concluding
deliberations of the Sixth Parliament under the Fourth Republican Constitution,
1992.”
Mr. Amidu said that “the partisanship, cronyism, patronage,
ethnicity, and endemic corruption of the Looter Governments of the Fifth and
Sixth Governments of the Fourth Republic had been allowed by the majority to
infect the fabric and conduct of Legislative business in the House.”
He hoped the current parliament would “be a leading champion of the
anti-corruption agenda within itself and against the executive and judiciary,”
adding “may this 7th Parliament not be party to paid covert
Government surveillance through illegal undercover agents spying on coordinate
organs of government and collaborating with the executive to suppress
parliament’s own corrupt practices while exposing that of the least powerful
branch, the judiciary.
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