By William
Yaw Owusu
Saturday
October 06, 2018
Former President Jerry John Rawlings has promised to
drop a ‘bombshell’ very soon about the ongoing documentary by Multimedia News
Channel, Joy News, on the killing of the three High Court judges and a
retired army officer in the heat of the revolution.
He said at the Accra Digital Centre where he
attended a United Nations Youth Summit yesterday that he would attend another public
lecture at the Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology (NKUST) in Kumasi
in the coming days and take the opportunity to put issues into perspective.
Rawlings appears to be at loss as to the motive of
those who put together the documentary on the incident which occurred several
years ago.
“I’ll release a bombshell at UST during a public
lecture”, he added.
In recent times, Joy
News and The Multimedia Group have been broadcasting a
comprehensive documentary on the killing of three judges and a retired army
officer in 1982 when the Provisional National Defence Council (PNDC) military
junta, led by then young Flt. Lt. Rawlings, seized power from the
democratically elected government of Dr. Hilla Limann.
The documentary is pushing that the prime suspect,
Joachim Amartey Kwei, could not have committed the crime without the backing of
the authorities in the PNDC.
According to the documentary, the dreaded Captain
Kojo Tsikata agreed that Amartey Kwei ought to have obtained the pass from a
higher authority before having unrestricted movement on that fateful night when
there was curfew.
The dastardly act remains a dark spot in the
nation’s political history after the three High Court Judges namely, Justice
Fred Poku Sarkodie, Mrs. Justice Cecilia Koranteng- Addow and Justice Kwadwo
Agyei Agyapong, as well as a retired army officer, Major Sam Acquah, were
callously murdered under strange circumstances at the Bundase Military Range in
the Accra Plains.
Their bodies were found on 3rd July, 1982.
According to the records, all the three judges had
adjudicated on cases in which they ordered the release of persons who had been
sentenced to long terms of imprisonment during the tenure of the Armed Forces
Revolutionary Council (AFRC) in 1979.
Investigations were conducted into the matter, after
which some active and retired army officers were prosecuted, but there is still
the belief that the real people who gave the order for these judges to be
killed have been left off the hook.
Special Investigative Board (SIB), chaired by Samuel
Azu Crabbe, recommended the prosecution of 10 persons.
Two of them, Joachim Amartey Kwei and Alolga
Akata-Pore, were members of the PNDC.
Names like Captain (Rtd) Kojo Tsikata, Sergeant
Alolga Akata-Pore, J. Amartey Kwei and Lance Corporal S.K. Amedeka, Michael
Senyah, Gordon Nsurowuo, Gowu, Ransford Jonny Dzandu, Gomeleshio and Evans
Tekpor, alias Tonny, have always come up for scrutiny as far as the case is
concerned.
Even though Amartey Kwei, Tekpor, Senya and Dzandu were
executed, Amedeka escaped from jail.
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