Posted on:
www.dailyguideghana.com
By William Yaw
Owusu
Wednesday, January
11, 2017
The Akufo-Addo government is not in agreement with a request by
former President John Dramani Mahama that he should be allowed to keep his
current residence located at No.3 Prestige Link, Cantonments, Accra.
The residence has been the official house for sitting vice
presidents.
The rejection is contained in a report by the Transition Team, which
was submitted to President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo on Monday.
It detailed reasons why the new government should not accede to the
immediate-past president’s request.
There is spontaneous outrage in the country over the decision by
former President Mahama to appropriate the official residence as part of his
end-of-service package.
Proper
Consultation
A source has said that President Akufo-Addo is still having consultations
on the request and that the new administration is likely to follow strictly the
first-come-first-served principle.
As a result, the government is likely to provide accommodation for
former President Kufuor and his vice, the late Aliu Mahama, who were denied
their respective end-of-service accommodations by the Mills/Mahama
administration.
The source said for purposes of equity, the government was going to
provide accommodations for all the ex-presidents, with the same architectural
designs.
Edu-Buandoh
Report
The NPP Transition Team has said President Mahama’s own appointed
committee, headed by Prof. Dora Francisca Edu-Buandoh of the University of Cape
Coast, did not recommend a house for him but rather agreed on 40 percent of his
salary in lieu of accommodation.
Yaw Osafo-Maafo, who is the
Chairman of the NPP Transition Team, has quoted page 44 of the report, which
suggests 40 percent of the ex-president’s monthly salary to be paid to him.
He claims that there is nothing
in the said report that talks about acquisition of his current official
accommodation.
The Edu-Buandoh Committee had
Kwamena Ahwoi, a former Local Government Minister and Chairman of the
University of Ghana Council, as a member who ruled out dishing out a house to
resettle the former president.
Secret Amendment
Apparently, the National
Democratic Congress (NDC) government, after realizing that there was no basis
to appropriate the house, allegedly used its majority in parliament to secretly
amend part of the Committee’s report to include housing for ex-President
Mahama.
Even after the amendment, the
NDC government did not say the president’s current abode should be given to
him.
Mahama’s Office
In 2009, the NDC administration reportedly motivated some young
party activists, led by one Prince Derick Adjei - who called themselves Ga
Dangbe Youth – and prevented ex-President Kufuor from having access to the
facility at North Ridge, near Parliament House.
They claimed the building was
on Ga land and that Mr. Kufuor should go to his native Ashanti Region.
In spite of the provocative
action, then National Security Coordinator Lt. Col. Larry Gbevlo-Lartey and
then Bureau of National Investigation (BNI) boss, Yaw Donkor and other security
capos, endorsed it and never allowed Mr Kufuor to use the facility to date.
Majority Leader
Majority Leader Osei-Kyei-Mensah
Bonsu stated categorically that the December 19, 2016 letter written by the
outgone Chief of Staff Julius Debrah to the then incoming NPP government to ask
it to endorse the decision to hand over the house to Mr. Mahama was premature
because parliament had then not even met to affirm the retirement package of
the now ex-president.
He also said that the NDC, under
Presidents John Evans Atta Mills and John Mahama, never honoured its part of
the agreement to resettle former President J.A. Kufuor, who was entitled to a
house when he left office.
The Majority Leader said former
Presidents Flt. Lt. J.J. Rawlings and Prof. Mills had all been settled by the
state, but Mr. Kufuor was never given anything.
Gabby’s Take
Gabby Asare Otchere-Darko, a lawyer, appeared to explain on social
media yesterday the status of ex-President Mahama’s request.
“The president, according to the law, as varied, is entitled to a
house. What he is not entitled to is to choose which house. He can only
request,” he posted on Facebook.
“It is up to the powers-that-be to decide. That decision must be
right by law, by the people and decent. And I am confident the final decision
will meet all three above,” he said.
Yankah’s Intervention
The founder of African University College of Education, who once
served as a minister under the first NDC regime, Kojo Yankah, has added his
voice to the debate, pointing out that it is wrong for President Mahama to take
the house.
“It is wrong for the ex-president to convert his official residence
into a personal one. Even if parliament approved of it and the new president
gave a nod, it is still wrong,” he posted on Facebook.
“When the late Obetsebi Lamptey (Jake) even paid for his official
residence, it was considered bad enough. The precedence is dangerous and should
not be allowed to stand,” he cautioned.
More Anger
A man who claimed to be a staunch supporter of the previous NDC
government said, “Mr. Mahama should move out. In 2008 we stood and fought on
such principle to drive out the then NPP elements. I will not do or accept a
U-turn to such a principle. In 2008 we drove the NPP out. We must stand for
Ghana.”
Another indicated, “I don't understand the mindset that enables our leaders
to appropriate their official residence for their private use. Nor do I
understand the mindset that allows the citizenry to acquiesce to the
misappropriation. It is saddening, sickening, shocking and stinking.”
Another man said, “None of these noble men who served this nation in
such capacity ever contemplated taking or buying such a property. I don’t
understand why Mr. Mahama wants to take it at all cost. It’s not the best.”
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