By William
Yaw Owusu
Monday August
06, 2018
Members of staff of the Electoral Commission (EC),
who caused the removal of Charlotte Osei from office, have officially filed a
fresh petition at the Office of the Special Prosecutor to investigate her.
The EC staff, led by two of their members, Forson
Ampofo and Godsway Dadjoe, want the Martin Amidu-led team to charge her for
causing financial loss to the state in a petition DAILY GUIDE learnt was
filed last Wednesday.
The petition for the Special Prosecutor’s Office to
institute criminal investigations included the contract given to Aerovote Limited
to print pink sheets for the 2016 general elections; the request for a new EC
head office building from the Mahama administration, which she went ahead to spend
the taxpayer’s money to partition; her position at Ghana Re-Insurance; as well
as a contract awarded to Superlock Technology Limited (STL).
Other issues in the petition included the contract
to construct pre-fabricated offices for the commission, a contract to another
company called Dreamoval, another one to Quazar Limited, which were all
captured in the report of the Chief Justice’s five-member committee that
recommended the dismissal of the chairperson of the EC.
Pink
Sheets
The petitioners claimed “Mrs. Osei owns a private
law firm - Prime Attorneys. The firm had a client called Aerovote Limited. When
she was EC Chair, Mrs. Osei and her firm, Prime Attorneys, communicated with
and gave information about how to bid for printing contract at the EC to
Aerovote Limited, which was not even a registered contractor of the commission
even before the processes for the bids were put together. Aerovote was eventually
awarded the contract.”
According to the petitioners, “Mrs. Osei, without
recourse to the commission, and without seeking approval of the commissioners,
requested a new office building for the commission. Even though the commission
was never given any proper land documents transferring ownership or use of the
building to the commission, Mrs. Osei instructed the spending of almost GH¢154,000,000
of the commission’s money in the internal partitioning of the building alone,”
adding “to date, the ownership of the building has not been ascertained and the
commission cannot move into the building.”
They suggested to the Special Prosecutor that “it is
a clear case of causing financial loss to the state.”
According to the petitioners, Mrs Osei assumed
office as Article 71 appointee on June 30, 2015, but claimed she was still
holding office at Ghana Re Insurance, a public company, contrary to Article
44(4) of the 1992 Constitution.
“When the issue was raised, the PRO of Ghana Re
Insurance confirmed that she only resigned on December 5, 2015. This means that
whilst holding office as chairperson of EC, she was still a board member of
Ghana Re Insurance,” according to the petitioners.
They further claimed the sacked EC Boss submitted
GH¢1 million for the renovation of the official bungalow for the chairperson
without recourse to the commission or appropriate staff of the commission.
“Mrs. Osei constituted herself into the commission’s
Tender Review Committee contrary to the Public Procurement Act. She singularly
chairs the Entity Tender Committee and the Tender Review Committee at the same
time. This puts her in a conflict of interest position and this is a clear
breach of the Public Procurement Act,” they stated.
They claimed “the South African company, Quazar
Limited, to which the EC gave a contract without proper procedure is owned by a
relative of Mrs. Osei.”
“We say that these breaches also mount to criminal
conduct and hereby lodge a complaint to you to further investigate and
prosecute,” the petitioners said.
The petitioners also drew the Special Prosecutor’s
attention to the adverse findings of the Chief Justice’s committee, including
the unilateral abrogation of a duly signed contract with STL which Mrs. Osei
turned round to re-award to the same company without following procurement
procedures for which the committee found her liable.
They also told the Special Prosecutor about the
award of a $25,000 contract to Quazar Limited in breach of the Procurement Authority
Act.
They expressed their readiness to assist Mr. Amidu
and his team with all the evidence to get to the bottom of the issues raised.
At a news conference recently, the petitioners said “we
wish to state that we shall use all legal means available to us to ensure that
her removal is permanent and cast in stone,” one of the petitioners Rabiu
Sulemana, who spoke on behalf of the EC staff, who were the petitioners in Mrs.
Osei’s case, said at a news conference in Accra recently.
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