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Commentary
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Press Release
HON. ALBERT KAN-DAPAAH
P.O. BOX AN 19405, ACCRA-NORTH TEL: 0244325000
November 4, 2013
THE EDITOR
THE HERALD
PMB CT 443
CANTONMENTS-ACCRA
OPEN COMMUNICATION
Dear Sir,
RE: GNPC 24 MILLION DOLLAR
DRILLSHIP SKELETON FOUND... KAN DAPAAH’S LETTER TO
KUFUOR REVEALS US$ 10 MILLION NOT US$19.5 MILLION WAS
PAID IN ACCRA NOT LONDON
Your front page lead story in the Wednesday October 30
to Thursday, October 31, 2013 issue of The Herald with
the above referenced headline refers.
I am amazed at the penchant of Mr. Larry Dogbe and The
Herald to consistently obfuscate and twist facts to suit
a particular political agenda against my person.
In reading the story under reference, the following
hatchet job was unprofessionally executed by Mr. Larry
Dogbe, in which process he did a great disservice to
himself and his training as a journalist:
1. The memo from which the conclusions are drawn could
not have been written in August 2001. It was clearly
written in the early days of the Kufuor administration
which is why I referred to K.T. Hammond, Dr. G.A.
Agambila and Ms. Gloria Akufo as Deputy Minister
Designates. These descriptions, without more, show that
at the time, these three persons had been nominated for
approval by Parliament but had not been duly sworn in by
H.E. President Kufuor as substantive Deputy Ministers.
It was not until Hon. K.T. Hammond became a substantive
Deputy Minister of Energy that he got involved deeply
and rightly so with the matters under consideration
culminating in the payment of US$19.5 million to Societé
Generale in July 2001.
2. Mr. Dogbe and The Herald sought to create the
impression that an amount of US$ 10 million was paid by
the Government of Ghana in Accra in respect of the Ghana
National Petroleum Corporation’s (GNPC) indebtedness to
Societé Generale in Accra in August 2001. This is
clearly untrue. The payment to Societé Generale was for
US$19.5 million and as stated earlier, was in July 2001.
3. Mr. Dogbe and The Herald failed to publish the
attachment to my memo when the said memo clearly stated
in paragraph two (2) thus “Attached is a letter he sent
to me today subsequent to our meeting the previous day
which records the issues we discussed at the meeting...”
As to why Mr. Dogbe and The Herald chose not to publish
the said attachment to my memo and instead proceeded in
the publication under reference to make very weak and
rather infantile deductions resulting in the conclusion
that the sum of US$ 10 million and not US$ 19.5 million
was paid in Accra and not London cannot be lost on any
reasonable man. The publication under reference was just
aimed at twisting and convoluting facts to create the
impression that my good self, H.E. President Kufuor and
his government have something to hide in respect of the
sale of the Discoverer D511. I however wish to assure Mr
Dogbe that his mission to introduce his own facts and
twist same to suit his parochial political agenda will
fail miserably because the facts he labours to purvey in
respect of the sale of the Discover D511 are a matter of
public record which record does not establish any
underhand dealings on my part or on that of the
government I dutifully served.
4. Anyone with a basic comprehension of the English
Language will also appreciate the fact that my
communication in the memo that “...This morning, Mr.
Mends came to see me and delivered the attached letter.
He mentioned to me that the $5million offer I made was
not acceptable to his principals in France. In our
subsequent discussions, I got the clear impression that
he would accept a negotiated settlement of $10
million...” cannot result in a conclusion by Mr. Dogbe
and The Herald that Societé Generale accepted settlement
of $10 million. This attempt to use my observations of a
person I met to post a definite conclusion that US$10
million was paid in settlement of the debt GNPC owed is
so poor and weak that Mr. Dogbe ought to have done a
better job even if his intention was to clearly libel me
with malice aforethought. A simple telephone call to me
to verify whether in line with my observation of Mr.
Mends’ countenance during our meeting; Societe Generale
later accepted US$ 10 million in settlement; thereby
making my observation correct would have earned Mr.
Dogbe applause from first year journalism students.
The mischief and malice that has actuated Mr. Dogbe and
The Herald’s publication under reference are surprising
but do not worry me. From 2001 when I assumed office as
Energy Minister and at all material times I always acted
reasonably and in the interest of good sense and the
interest of Ghana.
My record and contributions as well as those of the
Kufuor administration to the fortunes of GNPC speak
resoundingly and are clear for all to see.
I have, as a responsible citizen and a patriot,
forwarded a memo in respect of the true facts
surrounding the sale of the Discoverer D511 drill ship
to the Commissioner of the Judgment Debt Commission and
still stand by that communication.
I wish to remind Mr. Dogbe and The Herald of my
constitutional right to a full publication of this
rejoinder pursuant to Article 162(6) of the 1992
Constitution.
Yours faithfully,
ALBERT KAN-DAPAAH
(FORMER MINISTER OF ENERGY)
cc:
The National Media Commission
Accra
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