Tag: Scandal

  • President Katalin Novak of Hungary steps down over  scandal involving child abuse pardons

    President Katalin Novak of Hungary steps down over scandal involving child abuse pardons

    The leader of Hungary quit on TV because he pardoned a man who lied about a child abuse case.

    Last week, it came out that President Novak pardoned a man who was in prison for making children take back their claims of sexual abuse against a director of a government-run children’s home.

    Protests in Hungary were getting bigger and asking for her to leave her position.

    Ms Novak said sorry and admitted she made a “mistake” in giving the pardon.

    Judit Varga, who used to be in charge of making the pardon official, has quit her new job leading the European elections campaign for Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s party, Fidesz.

    The resignations happened because 25 people who were pardoned by Ms. Novak last year had their names revealed by Hungarian media last week. This caused a lot of disagreement.

    The list of people in prison included the deputy boss of a kids’ home near Budapest. He was sent to jail for three years because he made kids take back their reports of being hurt by the boss of the home.

    The director was sent to jail for eight years because he hurt children at the government facility.

    The people and political parties in Hungary wanted Ms Novak to quit, and she surprised everyone by deciding to resign.

    Ms Novak is well-liked in Fidesz and one of the few female politicians in a country where men usually have more power. She is a very important friend of Hungarian Mr Orban and used to work as his family minister before.

    In 2022, she was the first woman to become the Hungarian president, but the role is mostly for ceremonies.

    The situation has caused a big political problem for Hungary’s government that has been in power for a long time.

    In particular, it made Fidesz feel really bad because they focus on traditional family values in their social policy.

    Ms Novak said on TV that she pardoned the man because she believes he did not take advantage of the vulnerable children he was watching.

    She said sorry to the people who may have felt like she didn’t support them.

    Ms Novak said she made a mistake and that the forgiveness and lack of reasoning made people doubt the zero tolerance for paedophilia.

    Along with Ms. Novak, another important woman in Fidesz has also quit because of the same issue.

    Judit Varga, who was the minister of justice, also signed the decision to pardon.

    The two most important women in politics have quit, which is a big problem for Mr Orban and his party. Ms Varga was supposed to lead the Fidesz list in the European elections in June.

  • Kenyan senator detained in connection with a scholarship scandal

    Kenyan senator detained in connection with a scholarship scandal

    A Kenyan senator has been apprehended in connection with a scholarship scandal.

    Jackson Mandago, along with three others, faces a total of 11 charges, encompassing accusations of theft and misuse of authority.

    Allegedly, Mandago participated in a scheme that purportedly conspired to embezzle approximately 1.1 billion Kenyan shillings (equivalent to $7.6 million or £5.9 million). These funds were originally intended to facilitate higher education opportunities for Kenyan students in Finland and Canada.

    Local media reports have indicated that numerous students who had made payments for overseas education were left stranded within Kenya due to these purported actions. For those who had already commenced studies abroad, the situation posed the risk of homelessness, expulsion, and deportation as the county government ceased disbursements for accommodation and tuition.

    The allegations come to light during a period when Mr. Mandago was serving as a governor.

    It has been noted that Mr. Mandago has previously denied any misappropriation of the funds in question, as reported by Kenya’s Star newspaper.

    According to an additional report, Mr. Mandago, along with the incumbent Uasin Gishu county governor, has undertaken an agreement to facilitate refunds for the affected individuals.

    The scandal’s perpetrators have been warned to promptly return the funds for the Finland and Canada Overseas Education Program under penalty of “trouble” by President William Ruto, who also made a statement on the subject.

    He declared that he would provide local scholarships to individuals affected once the investigations were completed.

  • 5 major multi-million dollar scandals Gabby Otchere has been fingered in

    5 major multi-million dollar scandals Gabby Otchere has been fingered in

    No government can completely protect itself against scandals, but how they are handled and who is involved when they do decide how much harm is done to the government.

    There have been a number of incidents involving Gabby Asare Otchere-Darko, the president’s cousin, in the New Patriotic Party (NPP), which is led by Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo.

    According to the most recent “scandal” being reported by a member of parliament for the opposition National Democratic Congress, Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, Gabby was trying to get the government to pay GH187 million for a contract that the NPP had previously opposed and that the current administration changed when it took office.

    To support the authority he holds, Gabby, who recently declared that he was not a politician despite being closely associated with the NPP, has been given the title of Prime Minister of Ghana.

    He was referred to by Ablakwa as the grand master of the government in his most recent book, the Kitchen Scandal.

    Below are some scandals in which Gabby or his interests have been cited:

    The Agyapa Royalties deal

    In 2020, the Ghanaian government proposed a plan to raise funds by offering shares of a company called Agyapa Royalties Limited on the London Stock Exchange.

    However, this proposal faced severe backlash from civil society groups and the opposition, who accused it of being a secretive and corrupt deal, benefiting politicians at the expense of the nation.

    In a subsequent development, veteran journalist Kweku Baako confirmed that Gabby’s firm had served as transaction advisors to the government in this unsuccessful deal. He further explained that a UK-based law firm acted as the main advisors for the deal, with Africa Legal Associates working on behalf of that firm.

    “It is not true that Gabby’s firm got US$2 million from the deal. It is not true that his firm is a beneficiary of US$2 million. It’s not even up to US$105,000. It is the main transaction advisor that paid Gabby. It is about US$103,000. It is not US$2 million”.

    The role of Osafo-Maafo’s son and Gabby Otchere-Darko has been one of the most significant issues to arise from the controversy surrounding the sale.

    PDS scandal

    In 2019, the government was compelled to terminate a concessionaire agreement with Power Distribution Service Ghana Limited (PDS) due to issues with the financial guarantee provided for the deal.

    The decision came as a result of the discovery of significant breaches in PDS’s obligation to provide payment securities (demand guarantees) for the transaction, which were detected during further due diligence.

    Critics have criticized the Akufo-Addo/Bawumia administration for not acting in the best interest of Ghana during the negotiation and signing of the power concession.

    Recent revelations indicate that certain influential individuals and associates within the current administration were allegedly planning to distribute the shares of Power Distribution Service Ghana Limited among themselves.

    Three individuals frequently mentioned in connection with these questionable dealings surrounding the PDS deal are Philip Ayensu, a board member of PDS, Edward Akufo-Addo (also known as Bumpty), who is President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo’s blood brother, and Gabby Asare Otchere-Darko, the nephew of President Akufo-Addo.

    Ameri deal

    In 2018, Boakye Agyarko was dismissed from his position as the energy minister due to his involvement in an energy sector transaction. It happened within just a year of his appointment.

    Five years later, he has come forward to reveal that one of the reasons for his removal was the interference of Gabby Asare Otchere-Darko in the said deal, without his knowledge.

    During a widely circulated interview on Kumasi-based Asanteman FM, Boakye Agyarko alleged that Gabby Asare Otchere-Darko took it upon himself to renegotiate the Ameri deal without consulting the government’s committee assigned to handle the matter.

    When Boakye confronted Gabby about his actions, he was told to remain silent because President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo was already aware of the steps taken by Gabby.

    Agyarko recalled receiving a call from Gabby while he was on a flight to the US.

    Frimpong-Boateng galamsey report

    The former environment minister Prof. Frimpong-Boateng referenced Gabby in a report that was leaked, claiming that Gabby’s legal services to a galamsey company had interfered with his work.

    Since then, Gabby has filed a defamation lawsuit, claiming that some of the professor’s assertions were false and had damaged his reputation.

  • The sole head of state from Ghana to resign due to a corruption scandal

    The sole head of state from Ghana to resign due to a corruption scandal

    Although it will take a lot for a Head of State to resign, the act could also prove a daunting task for the future of any developing nation like Ghana.

    Long after Ghana gained independence in 1957, the country was subjected to autocratic rule or quasi-democracy due to the many coup d’états the country witnessed, until the tide turned and we got the longest democratic rule, which began in 1992 under the late former president Jerry John Rawlings and is still going strong.

    Despite the tedious responsibilities associated with being president, only one Head of State has been on record to have resigned in the history of Ghana.

    While the decision to resign is controversial, there have been arguments about many Ghanaian presidents who may have long gotten away with acts that require their resignations.

    But as a parable says, ‘Two wrongs don’t make a right’.

    In GhanaWeb’s history class, we take a look at the only Ghanaian Head of State who resigned from the position.

    Lieutenant General Joseph A. Ankrah resigned from office on April 2, 1969. Prior to this, he became Head of State in 1966 after Ghana experienced its first coup d’état following the overthrow of the Kwame Nkrumah government, sparking the formation of the National Liberation Council.

    Following the coup, General Ankrah became the first Chairman of the National Liberation Council (NLC).

    According to eaumf.org, General Ankrah resigned after having admitted that he had received money for political purposes from a private company. While serving as Head of State, his tenure was marred with various bribery scandals.

    Notable among the scandals was the admission of taking a bribe from a Nigerian businessman named Arthur Nzeribe.

    The allegation, at the time, was that results of an opinion poll conducted by Anthony Nzeribe and contracted by the NLC for that purpose, showed General Ankrah as the most popular person in Ghana from a field of prominent politicians, including General Afrifa and Kofi Abrefa Busia.

    Upon the revelation, the Commission of Enquiry was formed and determined that General Ankrah had received C6,000.00 from Nzeribe, which might have influenced the outcome of the opinion polls.

    Although, there were suspicions that other political factors were at play beyond the bribery scandal, General Ankrah was forced to resign as Head of State on April 2, 1969.

    About General Ankrah

    Joseph A. Ankrah was born on August 18, 1915, in Accra to Samuel Paul Cofie Ankrah, an overseer for the Christian Missionary Society and Beatrice Abashie Quaynor, who was a trader.

    Ankrah began his schooling in 1921 at the Wesleyan Methodist School in Accra, where his nickname was ‘Ankrah Patapaa’ for his “forcefulness in arguments and always playing leadership role among his mates.”

    In 1932, he entered Accra Academy where he established himself as a good football player. He obtained the Senior Cambridge School Certificate in 1937.

    Years after, he joined the Ghana Civil Service and later joined the Ghana Army.

  • True cause of Kwasi Kwarteng’s £10,000 per day scandal with a fictitious Korean firm

    True cause of Kwasi Kwarteng’s £10,000 per day scandal with a fictitious Korean firm

    A Ghanaian of British ancestry who served as the previous Chancellor of the Exchequer of the United Kingdom, Kwasi Kwarteng, has made headlines in recent days due to information that he agreed to work for a Korean corporation for a fee of £10,000 per day.

    He was ignorant of the fact that the company was involved in fraudulent activities.

    Actually, it was a fabrication of a political organization called Leading by Donkeys.

    Moreover, Kwasi Kwarteng was not the only British Member of Parliament (MP) who was a victim of Led by Donkeys’ alleged duping scheme; there were about four other Conservative Party MPs who were also implicated in this.

    Real reason behind this fake exercise by Led by Donkeys:

    Details on parliament.uk indicate that a generation ago, the expectation of most MPs was for them to have another job, at least on part-time terms.

    This was because until the reform of sitting hours in the 1990s, the Commons began work each day at 2.30pm, a schedule enabling many to continue with their profession at the Bar, or as a solicitor or journalist or doctor, the report added.

    And then from the 1980s, another employment opportunity became widespread: MPs being able to act as consultants to lobbying companies or PR firms, and in explaining parliamentary procedure and investigating the likelihood of legislation being passed to them.

    It is premised on such a conversation in the UK that the lead investigative journalist for the exposé, Anthony Barnett, set out to investigate this.

    He indicated that the document was an experiment to find out whether MPs will find time to take another job, “furthering the interest of foreign companies” during the UK’s cost of living crisis.

    He also stated that MPs in the UK are allowed to take as many jobs as possible and charge the amount of money they want but a lot of citizens have been protesting against this freedom.

    What the investigators wanted to offer the former UK Chancellor:

    According to a news report by theguardian.com, Kwasi Kwarteng and the other Tory MPs agreed to work for £10,000 a day to further the interests of a fake South Korean firm.

    The former UK chancellor met investigators acting as staff of the fake Korean company at his parliamentary office and agreed in principle to be paid the daily rate of £10,000.

    A video of the said meeting, which was more of a job interview, shared by Led by Donkeys showed Kwarteng touting his competencies and connections to prove that he is the right man for the job.

    After initially stating that he will charge £10,000 per month, the former chancellor increased his rate to £10,000 per day after the investigator told him they are willing to pay him between £8,000 to £12,000 per day for his role.

    “I have been an energy minister for three years, I was chancellor. You know, I have got a lot of experience in the UK,” he said.

    He added that his work as an MP will not be an impediment to his duties in his new role with the South Korean company.

    Kwasi Kwarteng even went on to say that he can bring on board the former British Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, whom he described as “a great campaigner”.

  • Cyril Ramaphosa defies scandal to win party vote

     The scandal-plagued president of South Africa,Cyril Ramaphosa, has been re-elected as head of the ruling ANC to raucous applause from his followers.

    He defeated his rival Zweli Mkhize by 2,476 votes to 1,897.

    Mr Ramaphosa won despite being dogged by allegations of money laundering, and a last-minute surge in support for Mr Mkhize, who has also been accused of corruption. Both deny the allegations.

    His victory puts him in pole position to lead the ANC in the 2024 election.

    But he is still at risk as he is being investigated by police, the tax office and central bank over allegations that he stashed at least $580,000 (£475,000) in a sofa at his private farm, and then covered up its theft.

    A panel of legal experts, appointed by the speaker of parliament, said that he had a case to answer as he may have both violated the constitution and broken an anti-corruption law.

    His supporters burst into song and dance after he was declared the winner, in a result that saw him win by a bigger margin than when he first ran for the leadership of the governing party – the African National Congress – in 2017.

    Mr Ramaphosa’s re-election bid was bolstered by the fact the ANC used its parliamentary majority to vote down the findings of the panel.

    The president has denied any wrongdoing, and has launched legal action to annul the panel’s report.

    He said the $580,000 came from the sale of buffaloes, but the panel said there was “substantial doubt” over whether a transaction took place.

    Mr Mkhize was the health minister in Mr Ramaphosa’s government until he was forced to resign last year over allegations of misspending funds set aside to deal with the Covid-19 pandemic.

    He too has denied any wrongdoing, and his supporters saw the allegations as an attempt to discredit him.

    Mr Ramaphosa was the odds-on favourite to win, but some of Mr Mkhize’s supporters looked stunned after the result was announced.

    They were confident of victory after offering key posts to other powerful leaders in deals struck just ahead of delegates casting their ballots at the conference.

    Both sides denied accusations of vote-buying.

    The ANC has been in power since white-minority rule ended in 1994, and is hoping to secure a sixth term in the 2024 parliamentary election. But opinion polls suggest that its vote has shrunk considerably because of widespread corruption in government, high unemployment and poor public services – including constant power cuts.

    The ANC elected a new deputy leader, Paul Mashatile, who defeated Mr Ramaphosa’s preferred candidate for the second-most powerful post in the party.

    Mr Mashatile is now the front-runner to become South Africa’s deputy president, and president in the event Mr Ramaphosa is forced out of power.

    The president’s allies won other powerful posts in the party, including that of secretary-general and national chairperson.

    Defeated candidates embraced the winners in a show of unity after a bruising conference.

    Supporters of ex-President Jacob Zuma had heckled Mr Ramaphosa during his opening speech at the conference last week.

    But no leader from KwaZulu-Natal, the political heartland of Mr Zuma, was elected to any of the ANC’s top seven posts, in the latest sign of his and the region’s declining influence in the party.

    Source: BBC

  • Son of former president of Mozambique, others, sentenced to 12 years in prison

    The son of a former president and others have received a 12-year prison sentence in Mozambique for their involvement in the “tuna bonds” corruption scam.

    Ex-President Armando Guebuza’s son, Ndambi Guebuza, and two former heads of intelligence, Gregorio Leao and Antonio do Rosario, each got 12 years behind bars.

    Eight of their co-accused were convicted and sentenced to between 10 and 12 years.

    “The crimes committed have brought consequences whose effects will last for generations,” Judge Efigenio Baptista said while handing down the sentences.

    A total of 19 people had been charged with blackmail, embezzlement and money laundering over their alleged roles in Mozambique’s biggest financial Scandal. Eight have been acquitted for lack of evidence.

    The scandal involved the country borrowing more than $2bn ($1.6bn) from international banks, much of it without the knowledge or approval of the country’s parliament, triggering an economic crisis.

    Source: BBC

  • Cyril Ramaphosa: South Africa’s president considers future amid corruption scandal

    South Africans are waiting, many in deep trepidation, to find out if President Cyril Ramaphosa is about to resign in the wake of a murky and highly politicised scandal involving cattle, a sofa, and the theft of hundreds of thousands (and possibly millions) of dollars.

    Much now hangs on a meeting, starting on Friday, of the leaders of the country’s governing party, the African National Congress (ANC).

    Mr Ramaphosa’s most ardent supporters – and he remains a popular leader – frame this moment as an all-or-nothing fight between a decent man, desperately trying to clean up a corruption-ridden country, and the forces of chaos with the ANC who are trying to get rid of him in order to keep hold of their loot and keep themselves out of prison.

    One commentator likened the drama to Shakespeare’s Henry V, urging Mr Ramaphosa to “stiffen the sinews” and fight to clear his name.

    There’s no doubt that the case against Mr Ramaphosa was – at least to begin with – politically motivated.

    A well-known political rival, linked to South Africa’s disgraced former President, Jacob Zuma, dramatically revealed allegations that millions of dollars – hidden in a sofa – had gone missing from Mr Ramaphosa’s high-end Phala Phala game farm, and that there had been a police cover-up.

    The president – a wealthy businessman and former liberation struggle icon, once backed by Nelson Mandela to succeed him – loftily declared that he was innocent.

    But the story has not gone away, and over time, as fresh details and denials have leaked out, even some of his supporters have acknowledged that the scandal has been poorly handled by Mr Ramaphosa and his aides.

    “There are questions that he has not been able to answer… about these huge sums of cash. He’d told us he’d put all these [businesses] in blind trust. I think he was very clumsy and careless… and out of touch,” said Nombonisa Gasa, a political analyst.

    So now what?

     

    In the over-heated world of the ANC – a party so long in power that its furious internal feuds now feel more like open-warfare – the campaigning and jockeying are in full swing.

    The party is due to select a leader later this month – with Mr Ramaphosa an easy favourite to win. But those calculations are now changing fast.

    Cyril RamaphosaImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption, The process of finding a successor for Mr Ramaphosa may weaken the ANC heading to the next elections

    It’s been widely reported that Mr Ramaphosa has already decided to quit, but is being persuaded by allies to think again, or at least to buy time in order to ensure a smooth transition to someone credible.

    His current deputy, and automatic heir, Vice-President David Dabede Mabuza, is not tipped as the right man for that role.

    But could anyone in the current ANC leadership – so many tainted, themselves, by allegations of corruption – garner the levels of nationwide popular support that Mr Ramaphosa still enjoys?

    And if not, are we watching the slow unravelling of the party that once liberated South Africa from apartheid – and election defeat in 2024?

    South Africa’s main opposition party, the Democratic Alliance, is certainly hoping to capitalise on the current crisis, calling for early elections. Some analysts see the ANC’s decline as both inevitable, and good for the country’s young democracy.

    “Most South Africans are really concerned about what will happen next. Because there is no-one ready to [replace Mr Ramaphosa]. But this is the beginning of the end for the ANC – and that’s a good thing. The ANC has done its job. It liberated the country. It’s time for something new,” said political analyst Thembisa Fakude.

    “I think South Africa has managed to establish very strong democratic shock absorbers, and [Mr Ramaphosa’s resignation – if it happens, would be] exemplary for Africa – here’s a leader who voluntarily resigned.”

    Jacob ZumaImage source, Getty Images
    Image caption, Former President Jacob Zuma remains an influential figure in the country’s politics

    It seems unlikely – but still possible – that Mr Zuma’s faction within the ANC will be able to capitalise on the chaos, return to power, and derail the entire anti-corruption drive. That would be a recipe for political oblivion at the next elections.

    “The Zuma faction is battling to cohere, beyond a group of people have grievances because they might face charges of corruption. But it’s too early to say they cannot come back,” said Ms Gasa.

    But even a moderately competent replacement for Mr Ramaphosa is likely to shake the markets and drive away the few foreign investors still willing to give South Africa a chance, at a time when the economy – grappling with almost daily power cuts – is struggling to recover from the pandemic, and from the years of state corruption during Mr Zuma’s era.

    Last year, the feuding within the ANC triggered riots in Durban and elsewhere that left more than 300 people dead and caused billions of dollars in damages. There was a sense then that South Africa had peered over the abyss and stepped back – that it now understood how fragile its young democracy was.

    That may be the case, but with no single, credible party poised to capitalise on the ANC’s struggles, the concern here is that South Africa is heading towards an era of deeply unpredictable and unstable coalition politics, easily exploited by smaller populist parties.

    As for President Ramaphosa himself – many wonder whether he has the stomach for a long fight, or whether the billionaire businessman, credited for his institution-building approach to government, but criticised for a lack of political muscle – may prefer to leave the ANC to its battles and return to his cattle ranch.

    “He did not have enough fighting instinct and an ability to go for the jugular, in getting rid of the most toxic anti-constitutional folk [in the ANC]. We needed someone with a more muscular approach,” said political analyst Eusebius McKaiser.

    Seven things about Cyril Ramaphosa:

     

    A cloth being held by African National Congress (ANC) supporters showing the face of South African President and ANC President Cyril Ramaphosa tImage source, AFP
    • Born in Soweto, Johannesburg, in 1952
    • Detained in 1974 and 1976 for anti-apartheid activities and launched the National Union of Mineworkers in 1982
    • Chairman of the National Reception Committee which prepared for Nelson Mandela’s release from prison in 1990
    • Became an MP and chairman of constitutional assembly in 1994
    • Moved full-time into business in 1997, becoming one of South Africa’s richest businessmen
    • On Lonmin board during 2012 Marikana massacre
    • Elected ANC leader in 2017 and on 15 February 2018 became president after the resignation of Jacob Zuma

    Source: BBC

  • Panel releases Ramaphosa farm scandal report

    The speaker of South Africa’s parliament has received a report from a panel tasked to establish whether President Cyril Ramaphosa should face impeachment for allegedly covering up a crime.

    The panel investigated the circumstances around an alleged cover-up of a robbery that took place at his private farm, Phala Phala, back in February 2020.

    It handed over its report to Speaker Nosiviwe Mapisa-Nqakula at a televised event on Wednesday morning.

    Ms Mapisa-Nqakula said that the report will be made public on 6 December, according to local media reports.

    President Ramaphosa denies any wrongdoing. He previously “pledged his full co-operation to the investigation” and said he was happy to be held accountable.

    Source: BBC

     

  • Wirecard: Scandal-hit firm says missing €1.9bn may not exist

    Scandal-hit payments firm Wirecard has said the €1.9bn (£1.7bn) missing from its accounts simply may not exist.

    Wirecard’s chief executive quit on Friday as the search for the missing cash hit a dead end in the Philippines.

    On Sunday the central bank of Philippines said none of the money appears to have entered the country’s financial system.

    The German company also said it was withdrawing its financial results for 2019 and the first quarter of 2020.

    “The Management Board of Wirecard assesses on the basis of further examination that there is a prevailing likelihood that the bank trust account balances in the amount of 1.9 billion EUR do not exist,” the company said in a statement on Monday.

    The missing money accounts for around a quarter of its total balance sheet.

    The company said it was continuing to discuss a financial lifeline with banks, including a current arrangement that is due to expire at the end of this month.

    It said it was also considering several potential plans to save the company, including cost cuts, the restructuring of its operations, and selling or shutting parts of the business.

    The scandal emerged after a series of articles in the Financial Times last year focusing on alleged accounting irregularities in Wirecard’s Asian operations.

    The missing money was supposed to be held in accounts at two Asian banks and had been set aside for “risk management”, the company said.

    The exit of Wirecard’s chief executive Markus Braun on Friday came after auditor EY refused to sign off its 2019 accounts over the missing funds.

    Wirecard joined Germany’s blue-chip Dax 30 share index two years ago. At the time, it was valued at €24bn, but its shares have crashed in recent days giving it a stock market valuation of less than €3bn.

    Disclaimer : “Opinions expressed in this article are the sole responsibility of the author(s) and do not in any way reflect those of tigpost.co. Our outfit will hereby not be liable for any inaccuracies contained in this article.”

    Source: bbc.com

  • MPs fight over Airbus scandal

    Members of the Minority National Democratic Congress (NDC) and the Majority New Patriotic Party (NPP) engaged in a heated debate last Friday after the NPP MP for Assin South, Rev. John Ntim Fordjour, had made a statement on the Airbus SE bribery scandal involving some Ghanaian government officials.

    The Assin South MP had detailed the circumstances leading to the purchase of three C-295 military transport aircraft by the NDC government under Prof. John Atta Mills, which he said smacked of cost inflation and bribery and, therefore, called on Parliament to also do an independent investigation into that matter.

    “Mr. Speaker, the rather disturbing revelations contained in the Deferred Prosecution Agreement and Statements of Facts on the case reveal, inter alia, that some officials of Airbus SE between 2009 and 2015 made or promised success-based commission payments of approximately five million Euros to Intermediary 5, who is alleged to be a close relative of high ranking elected Ghanaian Government Official (Government Official 1),” he said.

    He pointed out that the Statement of Facts further revealed the payments to Intermediary 5 by officials of Airbus SE were thus intended to induce or reward improper favour by Government Official 1 over the purchase of three C-295 military transport aircraft and that out of the five million Euros promised Intermediary 5, 3.85 million Euros was paid between March 2012 and February 2014.

    He further asserted that according to the United States Department of Justice to the District Court for the District of Columbia, Government Official 1, who was alleged to be an elected government official and was in office from 2009 to 2016, made direct contact with the management of Airbus SE in respect of the purchase of the aircraft a few months after he assumed office.

    He, therefore, said the issue had gained international dimension and needed the immediate attention of Parliament.

    The Minority members seriously opposed the statement and questioned why the Speaker should admit such a statement which was full of alleged factual inaccuracies and innuendos.

    According to the NDC MP for North Tongu, Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa, such a sensitive issue should have been admitted on the floor through motion and not a statement.

    He said a precedent had been set and that when the NDC assumed the Majority in Parliament, it would call for investigation into alleged BOST saga, Ameri, disappearance of 500 excavators, disappearance of 400 tricycles and the missing gold under the present government.

    According to the North Tongu MP, the Minority would be prepared for any investigation only if it would be fair and transparent because that would definitely vindicate the NDC government then that nothing wrong was done.

    The Majority Leader, Osei Kyei-Mensah-Bonsu, said indeed there were serious issues with the acquisition of the military aircraft by the then NDC government.

    According to him, the government then bought a used aircraft for $35 million while a completely new one was then selling at $22 million.

    He said the further purchase of staircase and the wings of the aircraft brought the total cost of each aircraft to around $60 million.

    He pointed out that hangar alone for one of the planes was built by the government at a cost of $17 million which was so outrageous.

    He, however, said that it would be a duplication of work for Parliament to also do another investigation into the matter which had already been referred to the Office of the Special Prosecutor (OSP) for investigation by the President of the Republic.

    He stated that Parliament could rather rely on the outcome of the investigations of the OSP for any further action on the matter.

     

    Source: dailyguidenetwork.com