Posted on:
www.dailyguideghana.com
By William Yaw
Owusu
Tuesday, February
07, 2017
The last-minute contracts awarded by the previous Mahama-led National Democratic Congress (NDC)
government in the cocoa sector are beginning to come to light.
The recently-sacked Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the Ghana Cocoa
Board (COCOBOD), Dr. Stephen Opuni, is said to be the main brain behind the
award of the contracts totaling about $512 million during the transition
period.
The brazen attempts by some functionaries in the previous Mahama
administration to award government contracts without recourse to value for
money have set tongues wagging.
Almost all the contracts awarded by COCOBOD were sole-sourced or
restricted tendering which with time became the modus operandi of Mahama’s NDC
administration and there appeared to be no transparency in the processes
leading to the award of the contracts.
The contracts are in the areas of road construction, upgrading and
surfacing of roads, supply of materials as well as the supply of agro-chemicals
for the cocoa sector.
A document sighted by DAILY GUIDE showed that the
contracts were awarded between October 3, 2016 - in the heat of the 2016
electioneering campaign - and January 6, 2017, when the NDC government had
miserably lost the elections and was on its way out.
Between October 2016 and early January 2017, the COCOBOD management
had awarded a total of $512,925,373.26 worth of contracts in the sector through
sole-sourcing or restricted contract.
By December 23, 2016 when the NDC had lost power, the COCOBOD
management’s sole-sourced awarded contracts alone was GH¢120,253,117.04
equivalent of $27,606,317.04, another $159,396,000 was sole-sourced as well as
another for 1.5 million pounds sterling ($1.957,070.71).
On January 6, the COCOBOD management awarded restricted tendering
contract of GH¢1,138,272,377.42 ($261,311,381.41) and another restricted
tendering contract for $62,654,604.10.
The sole-sourced contracts, according to available documents, were
done at the blind side of the Transition Team, and against the advice of some
senior technocrats at COCOBOD.
The road contracts were mostly done on restricted tendering basis
when the default position of the Procurement Act is competitive tendering.
An example was the contract for the rehabilitation of an 8.4
kilometre Sunyani Senior High School (SHS) and Asana Roads, in the Brong-Ahafo
Region, awarded on January 6, 2017 at the cost of GH¢19,092,779 million to
Ousman Inusah Company, while a contract worth GH¢19,889,530.05 was also awarded
to ERDMAC Company Limited on the same date for the surfacing of the Sankore-Kwabeng
feeder road, also in the Brong-Afafo Region, where Stephen Opuni is believed to
hail from.
A computation of the sole-sourced and the restricted tendering in a
common currency (US$) comes to about $512 million in just three months.
Interestingly, the only reason given for the sole-sourcing was that those
items were of a “proprietary nature.”
Most of the agro-chemicals contracts were also awarded on
sole-sourced basis between December 3 and December 23, 2016.
About 22 companies were given contracts to supply chemicals such as
Kocide 2000 Fungicide, Pridapod Insecticide, Metacide Super WP Fungicide,
Liquid Fertilizer, Defender Fungicide, Fungikill 50WP Fungucide, Natural
Organic Fertilizer, Cocofeed Fertilizer Akatemaster Insecticide as well as
Akate Asar Insecticide.
The rest include the supply of Duapa Fertilizer, Acati Power
Insecticide, Adon Cocoa Fertilizer, Lithovit Liquid Fertilizer, Adehye Cocoa
Fertilizer, Champion 50 WP Fungicide, among others, at a whopping total cost of
GH¢120,253,117.04; $159,396,000 and 1,550,000 pounds.
No comments:
Post a Comment