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Press Release
Office of Martin Amidu
April 04, 2015
WATERVILLE’S
JUDGMENT DEBT TO BE REFUNDED TO THE REPUBLIC
OF GHANA IS €47,365,624.40 AND NOT €25
MILLION |
Read the full release:
WATERVILLE’S JUDGMENT DEBT TO
BE REFUNDED TO THE REPUBLIC OF GHANA IS
€47,365,624.40 AND NOT €25 MILLION
EXCLUDINDING INTERESTS: BY MARTIN A. B. K.
AMIDU
A number of Ghanaians have called me to ask
how much Waterville is to refund to the
Republic of Ghana as a consequence of the
decision and orders of the Supreme Court
dated 14th June 2013. This is apparently
because of late the media has carried the
story that Waterville has taken the
Government to international arbitration to
challenge an order for the refund of €25
million made by the Supreme Court. No
explanation appears to be coming from
Government sources to indicate the total
amount of refund to be made by Waterville is
€47,365,624.40. I have therefore deemed it
necessary to address this issue relating to
the Waterville decision and order as the
citizen public interest Plaintiff in this
matter.
The Supreme Court formally granted the
Attorney General capacity to enforce the
judgments debts and related matters on 31st
March 2015. This is after almost two years
of delay on the part of the Government to
ask for that direction from the Court. My
views on the delay in making the application
and why I think it has the tendency to
frustrate future citizen public interest
plaintiffs is contained in my affidavit
filed on 30th March 2015 to the Attorney
General’s motion for leave to enforce the
decisions and order. I was the only party to
file an affidavit in answer to the Attorney
General’s motion for leave to enforce the
judgments and orders in the case and the
public has a right to know my views as the
public interest citizen plaintiff. I will at
least be sending a soft copy of the
affidavit to the media as an attachment. The
certified true copy of the directions given
by the Supreme Court on 31st March 2015 was
not available to me at the time of writing
this but I will post a copy on my website
for public consumption as soon as I get a
copy.
I pray that the delay in taking steps to
enforce the judgments and orders in this
case does not affect the ability of the
Republic of Ghana to retrieve all sums
involved with the accompanying interest.
My views and conclusions on the judgment
debts are as they appear here under.
THE WATERVILLE CONTRACTS AND PAYMENTS
The Waterville contract and payments have
two components or aspects.
The 1st Component of the Waterville Contract
The first component or aspect was the
payment by the Government of Ghana of
€22,365,624.40 as certified by Building
Industry Consultants Ltd (BIC) to Waterville
through the sub-contractors. See pages 4 to
5 of the Supreme Court judgment dated 14th
June 2013. See particularly the finding of
the Supreme Court on the last paragraph of
page 5 which states that: “The value of the
work previously undertaken by the 2nd
defendant was duly confirmed by the
consultants for the project, Building
Industry Consultants Ltd (hereafter referred
to as “BIC”). The Government of Ghana
subsequently paid for all the work certified
by BIC, totaling some €22,365,624.40. This
payment was problematic since it appears to
have used a restitutionary route to bypass
the legal consequences of an inchoate
international business transaction to which
the Government was a party, which had not
been approved by Parliament in terms of
article 181(5).”
On page 37 of the judgment the Supreme Court
after reviewing the case against the 2nd
Defendant, Waterville, from pages 33 said at
pages 37 in respect of this aspect of the
case as follows: “This is an extraordinary
account of the State’s view of its liability
to the 2nd Defendant. In our view, it was
fundamentally erroneous in ignoring the
effect of article 181(5) of the 1992
Constitution. From the analysis earlier made
of the penumbra effect of article 181(5), we
affirm that there is no liability of the
State to 2nd defendant. The 2nd defendant is
thus obliged to return all monies paid to it
pursuant to the transaction…….”
On page 33 to 34 the Supreme Court states
that: “The Governments action in paying the
2nd defendant for the work it did prior to
the conclusion of the terminated 26th April
agreement was unconstitutional, according to
the analysis set out above. According to the
plaintiff’s averment in his Statement of
Case, verified by affidavit: (Court quotes
paragraph 22 of the Statement of Case and
continues on page 34)
Thus, the Supreme Court found as a fact
that: “The Government of Ghana subsequently
paid for all the work certified by BIC,
totaling some €22,365,624.40” which was
unconstitutional, and nobody can wish this
away. It ought to be noted that at this
stage there was no contract between the
Government of Ghana and the sub-contractors
through whom the Government arranged to pay
the restitution to Waterville. They were
sub-contractors to Waterville and therefore
if Waterville had no right to any
restitution or re-imbursement, the
sub-contractors would have no claim to make
any deductions from the €22,365,624.40 paid
to Waterville through them.
This explains why the Supreme Court stated
as follows: “Relief 14 is granted to the
extent that the order is directed at the 2nd
defendant, requiring it to refund to the
Republic of Ghana all sums of money paid to
it in connection with the two inoperative
Agreements dated 26th April 2006 and the
work done on the stadia (emphasis
supplied).” It is clear from the foregoing
that to remain silent with this information
to the public on this quantum of the
judgment debt when Waterville goes to
international arbitration is to curtail the
reach of the Supreme Court decision and
order in respect of the work done and paid
to Waterville in the sum of €22,365,624.40.
The 2nd Component of the Waterville Contract
The second aspect of this contract apart
from the certification of BIC and payment
for the alleged work undertaken by the 2nd
defendant, Waterville, and paid for by the
NPP Government was the claim made by the 2nd
defendant in the letter dated 9th Mach 2009
to NDC Government leading to mediation and
payment of €25million to Waterville. See
pages 6 to 7; and pages 33 to 41.
The total amount to be refunded by
Waterville in accordance with the decision
of the Supreme Court that: “Relief 14 is
granted to the extent that the order is
directed at the 2nd defendant, requiring it
to refund to the Republic of Ghana all sums
of money paid to it in connection with the
two inoperative Agreements dated 26th April
2006 and the work done on the stadia.”: is
restitution paid for the work done on the
stadia as certified by BIC and paid for
€22,365,624.40 and mediated payment of
€25million making a total refund of a
payment of €47,365,624.40.
PAYMENT OF INTEREST ON THE SUMS TO BE
REFUNDED BY WATERVILLE
The Supreme Court inadvertently did not
direct the payment of interest to the
Republic in the above cases but corrected
this in the Isofoton case when it
specifically ordered that: “3. Interest is
to be paid on the sum adjudged above from
date of its receipt by the 2nd defendant, in
accordance with the Court (Award of Interest
and Post judgment Interest) Rules 2005 (CI
52).” The Republic of Ghana is entitled to
interest on the amounts paid to Waterville
and the motion for leave to enforce the
decision and orders of the Court shows that
interest has to be claimed on the total
amounts from date of receipt to date of
payment.
CONCLUSION
No matter the insults and name calling by
the Government and my own political party,
the NDC, nothing will stop me from pursuing
this GARGANTUAN constitutional rape on the
people of Ghana to its logical conclusion as
long as I have life in me. Putting Ghana
First instead of Governments is the only
salvation for this our dear Republic.
Martin A. B. K. Amidu
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the message of Jesus
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all its sadness and glory, that it engenders.
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Cote D’Ivoire Likely To Win
Injunction Case – Law lecturer
Pulse, April 03, Ghanadot - Speaking to Citi News
a Senior Law lecturer at the University of Ghana, Dr
Appiahgye Atuah explained that because oil is not a
renewable resource “if Ghana is allowed to continue with
the exploration and exploiting the resource and the case
drags on for many years and in the end Cote D’Ivoire
wins then….they would have lost huge sums of monies,”
hence his conclusion.......More
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WATERVILLE’S JUDGMENT DEBT TO
BE REFUNDED TO THE REPUBLIC OF GHANA IS €47,365,624.40
AND NOT €25 MILLION
Review, April 05, Ghanadot
- No matter the insults and name calling by the
Government and my own political party, the NDC, nothing
will stop me from pursuing this GARGANTUAN
constitutional rape on the people of Ghana to its
logical conclusion as long as I have life in me. Putting
Ghana First instead of Governments is the only salvation
for this our dear Republic......More
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Ghana wins IMF
approval for almost $1bn bailout
FT, April 05, Ghanadot - Ghana has won official
approval from the International Monetary Fund for an
almost $1bn bailout, which falling commodity prices and
a rising budget deficit forced the west African country
to turn to.... .More
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