By William
Yaw Owusu
Monday April
16, 2018
Information reaching DAILY
GUIDE indicates that some former ministers in the erstwhile National
Democratic Congress (NDC) government and Members of Parliament (MPs), who have
been caught in an alleged double-salary scandal, are submitting their bank
statements to the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) of the Ghana Police
Service.
It has emerged that a number of
them have already sent their bank statements for scrutiny by the CID, despite
the claim by top-notch members of the NDC that the move to investigate them is
a case of ‘political witch-hunt.’
According to sources, there were
frantic efforts by some of the former ministers last week to get through to
their bankers to get details of their monthly salary structure for onward
submission to the police.
DAILY GUIDE has
learnt that some of the former ministers, who allegedly drew salaries as MPs
and ministers of state, detected the double salary anomaly and notified the
authorities for the right thing to be done.
However, it is unclear if the monies
that had already been credited to the accounts of such people were returned to
chest.
Bernard Allotey Jacobs, NDC Central
Regional chairman, who conceded that some of the ex-ministers who were MPs
actually received double salaries, said they were ready to use their ex-gratia
to offset them.
A list stumbled upon by DAILY
GUIDE has the names of sitting MPs like Minority Leader Haruna Iddrisu,
former Majority Leader Alban Bagbin, former Greater Accra Regional Minister Nii
Laryea Afotey Agbo, former Brong-Ahafo Regional Minister Eric Opoku, former
Petroleum Minister Emmanuel Armah-Kofi Buah, among others, on it.
It’s not clear if they had ever
been paid double from 2013 to 2016 as being alleged, while former MPs like
Alhassan Azong, Mustapha Ahmed and Aquinas Tawiah Qunasah also made it to the
list as likely to have had similar benefits for the same period.
Alhassan Azong
flatly denied it when DAILY GUIDE reached him last night.
Attempts to reach others were unsuccessful,
but the CID indicates that it’s going ahead with the probe.
In all, about 48 names are on the
list spanning five years from 2012.
Edward Nii Lante Vanderpuye, former
sports minister and MP for Odododiodioo, whose name appeared on the list, had
flatly denied the allegation, saying that he had not received any invitation
from the CID, likewise Mr. Azong.
Mr. Bagbin, the Second Deputy
Speaker of Parliament and NDC MP for Nadowli/Kaleo, has already confirmed that he
had been contacted by the CID and even said on social media that he suspected
that people within his political fraternity might have leaked the information
to the authorities after which he had to honour a police invitation.
“If anybody thinks that leaking our names to the
police CID thwarts our chances and advances their selfish claim to leadership
in our party, then my brother, think again because when we go down, we go down
together. A word to the wise,” according to the tweet.
Haruna Iddrisu had also been contacted and is likely
to meet the CID on Thursday, April 19, having told the police that he was out
of the country.
Interestingly, the names of NDC MPs
like Mahama Ayariga (Bawku Central) and Casiel Ato-Forson (Ajumako Enyan
Essaim), who have been vocal on the double salary saga, are not on the list.
The police have said that the alleged double
salary saga “is contrary to Section 124 (1) of the Criminal and other Offences
Act 1960 (Act 29) as amended in 2012, (Act 849). Section 124 relates
to the offence of stealing.”
The list appears to show that a good number of the ministers, who served
under former President John Mahama, took double salaries for four years, whilst
others received double salaries for two and three years, probably because they
were reshuffled.
In 2012, four of the ministers, who reportedly took double salaries, are
currently not serving in parliament, but by 2013 the double salaried appointees
had increased to 22 while in 2014 about 18 were said to have been involved.
For 2015 and 2016, 15 and 12 appointtees purportedly took double
salaries respectively.
This list showed that the appointees received double salaries at least
once a month, whilst others received them monthly throughout the years.
On Thursday, the CID said that it had
not suspended any investigations into the allegations.
That response followed a claim by
the minority MPs that the CID boss had embarrassed them by inviting them over
the alleged scandal.
A communication issued by the CID
indicated that some NDC MPs, who were invited over the allegations, would again
be summoned for questioning.
Initially, 25 NDC MPs were said to
have been invited by the CID, but the minority in parliament held a press
conference on Tuesday and attacked the CID boss and DAILY GUIDE over the invitation and the publication of the story
respectively.
No comments:
Post a Comment