Posted on: www.dailyguideghana.com
By William Yaw Owusu
Thursday, February 16, 2017
Chairman of the Appointments Committee of Parliament, Joseph
Osei-Owusu, has flatly denied the allegation of bribery leveled against him by
colleague Member of Parliament (MP), Mahama Ayariga, saying that it was cooked
up.
Mr. Osei-Owusu, the 1st Deputy Speaker, said yesterday that his
accusers had openly made the allegation as a form of ‘equalization’ as he
continuously said that then President John Mahama was corrupt.
He said that it was the MP for North Tongu, Samuel Okudzeto
Ablakwa, who claimed in the presence of colleague MP, Kobina Tahir Hammond of
Adansi Asokwa, that because Energy Minister, Boakye Agyarko (who had gone
through the vetting process) had said ex-President John Mahama was corrupt,
they (NDC members) were going to spread the allegation of bribery.
Mr Osei-Owusu indicated that Okudzeto Ablakwa had said
specifically that “we wanted you to face the same heat as John Mahama,” in the
presence of K.T. Hammond.
Oral Testimony
The 1st Deputy Speaker made the denial when he
testified at a Special/Ad-hoc Committee, set up by the Speaker of Parliament to
investigate Mahama Ayariga’s allegation that Boakye Kyeremateng Agyarko, through
some people, paid GH¢3,000 to the minority MPs on the committee to influence
his (Agyarko’s) approval as Minister of Energy.
The committee, chaired by Joe Ghartey, MP for Essikado Ketan and
Minister for Railways Development, is specifically looking into the allegation
against Mr. Osei-Owusu aka Joe Wise, who Mahama Ayariga, NDC MP for Bawku
Central, had cited as the conduit for bribing the MPs; and Minority Chief Whip,
Alhaji Muntaka Mohammed Mubarak, who Ayariga claimed had brought the money.
At its first public sitting which was telecast live, the committee
members, including Ben Abdallah Banda, MP for Offinso South; Magnus Kofi
Amoatey, MP for Yilo Krobo and Benson Tongo Baba, MP for Talensi , asked Mr.
Osei-Owusu questions.
However, a fifth member, Ama Pomaa, MP for Juaben, was not present
but Abena Durowaa Mensah, MP for Assin North, was in attendance.
Equalization Game
Narrating the incident, the witness, who offered to testify
without the help of a counsel, said that on Friday, January 27, 2017, the
Appointments Committee was working when a friend journalist sent him an audio
recording that one Ablordepey was reporting from Parliament House that then
nominee Boakye Agyarko had brought GH¢100,000 to him to distribute among
members of the committee.
He said his enquiries from the Parliamentary Press Corps showed
that the said Ablordepey was not a member and he subsequently showed the
recordings to the Minority Leader, Haruna Iddrisu, who is a ranking member of
the committee and the entire leadership of parliament.
“Within an hour, other MPs showed me media publications and this
time, they had attributed the allegation to Mahama Ayariga,” he said.
The Conclave
According to Mr.
Osei-Owusu, although the committee had always taken its decisions to approve or
reject nominees on the same vetting day, a meeting which he referred to as
‘conclave’ was held at the Speaker’s Lobby to resolve the appointments of Mr. Agyarko and Yaw Osafo-Maafo (Senior
Minister) since the minority had said they were not going to approve them.
“After we had discussed the issues relating to the two nominees at
the conclave, I raised the issue of bribery allegation leveled against me and
said we should find solution to the problem there.
It was at that moment that Okudzeto Ablakwa intervened and explained that the allegation was made up because the NPP had characterised John Mahama as corrupt.
"We were spreading the corruption allegations," Joe Osei-Owusu reported Okudzeto as saying.
“It was at that point that Okudzeto Ablakwa said because Agyarko
had said President Mahama was corrupt ‘we were also spreading corruption
allegation’ against the NPP government.”
Initial Reaction
Mr. Osei-Owusu said with Okudzeto Ablakwa’s ‘confession’ he wanted
to ‘dismiss’ the allegation as one of those political rhetoric but he later
realized that Mahama Ayariga was ‘unrepentant’ and therefore decided to pursue
the matter to its logical conclusion.
“When the time came, I said on the floor of the house that the
people had confessed that they did that by equalization. I expected that the
matter had died but by evening on the same day Mahama Ayariga said on social
media that his allegation was true.
“Muntaka and I never discussed anything about money. Neither have I taken money from Agyarko for myself
or anybody. Based on what they said about me, there were many presumptuous
conclusions drawn in the media so my main intention was to go to court. I
wanted to meet my accuser face-to-face so I could clear my name,” Mr Osei-Owusu
asserted.
Give-And-Take
Committee member (Magnus Kofi Amoatey):
At the conclave meeting you said it was Hon. Ablakwa who spoke. Did Hon.
Ayariga speak?
Witness (Osei-Wusu): No.
Committee Member: Do you expect
considerations from nominees?
Witness:
No.
Committee Member: Did you engage Hon. Ayariga
one-on-one on why he made the allegation?
Witness: No. I wouldn’t trust him to do
any such thing. It would have been suicidal to do it after the allegation.
Committee Member:
Did you raise it at conclave?
Witness: Yes.
Committee Member:
Did you confront Hon. Muntaka?
Witness: Yes. The following day, he came
to me to apologise that I have been brought to the centre of this allegation.
Committee Chairman (Joe Ghartey): Did you take money from the
nominee Boakye Agyarko?
Witness: No.
Chairman: Did you give money to Hon.
Muntaka for distribution?
Witness: No.
Sitting continues on Friday when
Alhaji Muntaka, Mahama Ayariga, the star witness and Boakye Agyarko are
expected to testify.
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