By William
Yaw Owusu
Thursday
January 04, 2018
In its desperate bid to hang on to power, the
National Democratic Congress (NDC) purportedly devised various means aimed at winning
the 2016 general elections.
It has emerged that in the heat of the campaign towards
the general elections, the then NDC government, led by President John Dramani Mahama,
almost succeeded in printing a whopping GH¢1 billion into the system to finance
the NDC campaign.
The deal, involving the printing of GH¢50 notes to
the tune of GH¢1 billion, however, failed to go through at the eleventh hour because
the official printer of Ghana’s currency in Europe - Crane - allegedly refused
to get involved, citing criminality.
The surreptitious deal involved flooding the market
with the extra cash, passing it through non-conventional means, for vote buying
and other matters bordering on criminality.
The NDC operatives reportedly cooked the deal from
the Flagstaff House in Accra and was said to have been done on the blind side of
the Bank of Ghana (BoG), whose Governor at the time was Dr Abdul Nashiru
Issahaku - a close associate of then President Mahama.
However, it is not clear whether the former Governor
sanctioned the criminal idea, but according to sources, one of his deputies was
neck-deep in the shady deal in collaboration with some senior appointees at the
presidency at the time.
According to sources, National Security radar has picked
the case for investigation.
The Flagstaff House elements at all material times
were using the said deputy governor as the conduit for the alleged criminal deal
and did not want it to go through the official banking processes of currency printing.
The huge amount was all supposed to be in GH¢50
denomination as insisted by the Flagstaff House kingpins, although the
‘connection man,’ a Nigerian whose name was given as Lukman Lawal, had advised that
the printing should be done in smaller denominations like GH¢5 to avoid
detection.
DAILY
GUIDE has gathered that the said Lawal met officials of Crane
- a Swedish firm believed to be in-charge of printing Ghana’s currency - several
times in Geneva, Switzerland and London ahead of the supposed printing, but the
key agent between Ghana and the printing firm refused, insisting it was a
criminal action.
Later when the deputy governor was queried about the
whole deal, he allegedly claimed that pressure was mounted on him from the
Flagstaff House and mentioned a top Mahama aide, who is a former manager of a
radio station, as one of the people behind the deal.
According to sources, the Nigerian was going to fly
his private jet from Houston, Texas, United States, to meet the Crane officials
and fly the money to Africa and would eventually use Ghana’s presidential jet
to transfer it into the country from Nigeria - without the approval of the Customs
Division of the Ghana Revenue Authority (GRA).
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