Press Release
NPP
March 17, 2016
WOYOME'S ACQUITTAL SHOWS THAT THE PLOT
OF "CREATE, LOOT AND SHARE" CONTINUES
UNABATED
On Thursday March 12
2015, the High Court in Accra acquitted
Mr. Alfred Woyome from criminal charges
brought against him by the Attorney
General.
Last Thursday 10 March 2016, the
Appeals Court upheld the decision of the
High Court to acquit Mr. Woyome on the
charges of defrauding by false pretence
and causing financial loss to the state.
Both acquittals were secured on the
ground that the state had not presented
a convincing case to the courts.
The New Patriotic Party (NPP) like a
vast number of Ghanaians, is not
surprised at these turn of events
regarding the criminal prosecution of
Mr. Woyome over the NDC government’s
payment to him of taxpayers monies to
the tune of Gh¢51.8m in 2010.
The twists and turns that led to Mr.
Woyome being paid ¢51.8m of taxpayers
monies in 2010 clearly showed a
deliberate pattern of high ranking NDC
government officials, aided by highly
placed public servants to collude,
connive and conspire with NDC connected
individuals to misappropriate taxpayers
monies.
The elements of this classic plot of
deliberate connivance and collusion are
all present in the Woyome payout.
In this particular case, President
John Mills (We are told in a EOCO
report) at some point intervened and
ordered that no public monies should be
paid to Mr. Woyome and that Ministers
should go to court to defend the state.
The High Court also ordered in
September 2010 that only a third of the
monies should be paid to Mr. Woyome
pending the determination of the case.
Despite these interventions, ministers
of State aided by highly placed public
and civil servants still went ahead and
managed to pay the colossal amount
ofGh¢51.8m (about $35 million) to Mr.
Woyome.
One Supreme Court Judge,
sitting in the civil case against Mr.
Woyome, in trying to make sense out of
these payments could only surmise that
the payments can only be understood as a
grand scheme to create, loot and share
taxpayer’s monies.
Ladies and Gentlemen, sad to say the
formula of ‘create, loot and share’,
evident in the payment to Mr. Woyome,
has turned out to be just the dress
rehearsal. The same twists and turns
which ended with the payment of massive
amounts of tax payers' monies to Mr.
Woyome have since been replicated and
runs through other massive fraudulent
payments involving Waterville, GYEEDA,
SADA and the latest episode of Smartty’s
bus branding etc.
The same pattern, the same
collusion, the same conniving, the same
sequencing of events that made the
Woyome payment possible can be seen in
all of these other payments.
Let’s take the Waterville payment.
Messrs Waterville makes a claim. Mr.
Woyome writes to dispute the Waterville
claim, and made a claim for himself.
Waterville then wrote to dispute the
Woyome claim. Then Waterville’s lawyer
is removed from this case, and Mr.
Woyome's lawyer now wrote for both
previously feuding parties. The two
parties even settle on an accord on how
the monies would be shared, thus showing
how confident they were of being paid.
Over $20 million of taxpayers monies
were subsequently paid.
The same pattern is repeated in the
GYEEDA payments. A handful of "service
providers” are given "training”
contracts. Only a small fraction of
people are "trained”. Yet full payments
are made even before the trainings
start. Then more training proposals
follow, more contracts are given again,
full payments are advanced again and
only a fraction is "trained" again!! And
it went on and on.
You take SADA. In election year
2012, government claimed it went into
partnership with a private entity to
venture into guinea fowl (akonfem )
business. The government promptly paid a
whopping Ghc15 million ($9 million at
the time), as its share of capital
requirements. Up till today, there is no
record of the private company paying its
share of the capital requirements.
As if that was not bad enough, the
government also promptly paid another
even more whooping Ghc32 million to the
same private company to engage in tree
planting.
As l speak, there is no trace of the
akonfem business or the trees. Akonfem
has now become another by-word for
corruption in this country.
The
recent bus branding saga sees the
pattern repeated. The job was awarded,
and executed even before a contract was
executed with the contractor. In this
case, the contract sum was overpaid by
over 100%!
Ladies and gentlemen,
since these payments became matters of
public knowledge and of great public
concern, the attitude of the NDC
government, either in attempts in
prosecutions or retrieval, have been so
lackadaisical as to give further
credence to the plot of create, loot and
share.
The High Court and Appeal Court
judgments have already exposed the NDC
government’s attitude in the case of the
Woyome payment. The case was dismissed
by both courts on the ground that the
government could not show a convincing
case. Indeed, the High Court berated the
government for its lackadaisical
attitude during the trial and for
repeatedly wasting the time of the
court. Indeed the trial judge fined the
Attorney General Ghc 500 for this
attitude.
The NDC government has been in court
with criminal charges against Woyome
since 2010. The question asked by many
Ghanaians is how a conviction against
Mr. Woyome can be secured when it was so
obvious that there were high ranking
public officials in collusion with Mr.
Woyome , but none of whom had been
brought to court? Even one high ranking
public servant who had had huge monies
paid into his bank account by Mr.
Woyome, was not in court!!
Even the order by the Supreme Court
on July 19, 2014, that the state
retrieved the monies paid to Mr. Woyome
was obtained by Mr. Martin Amidu, a
private citizen.
It has been nearly two years since
the Supreme Court ordered the retrieval
(without interest) of the Woyome
payment. To date, not a pesewa has been
retrieved!
On GYEEDA, the government’s
prosecution of one or two officials, set
against the full recommendations of the
government’s own committee, exposes the
government’s lackadaisical response.
On SADA, the government officials
did not ensure that the private
company’s contribution to the equity was
paid. There is no trace of the Akomfem
nor the Trees for which so much
taxpayers’ money were paid. Not a single
government official who facilitated
these payments has been punished. Not a
single pesewa has been retrieved. And
SADA is directly under the office of the
President.
Even the retrievals that President
Mahama himself ordered have only yielded
a fraction.
On November 15 2013, President
Mahama assured the nation “I have
instructed the Minister for Justice and
Attorney General, EOCO & the Minister
for Finance to work with the Minister
for Youth & Sports to achieve the
following by 31st December 2013: secure
refunds of monies wrongfully paid to or
appropriated by any individuals or
companies from contracts with SADA,
Gyeeda and the Ghana Revenue Authority
and to retrieve monies wrongfully paid
to Waterville and Isofoton”. As the Gas
will say “Ke ba Shi Biane”. Not a pesewa
has been retrieved from Messrs
Waterville and lsofoton today 17th March
2016, not to talk of the president's
deadline of December 2013!!
One
key member of the GYEEDA investigation
team, in obvious disappointment,
recently remarked “We are being robbed.
We are seriously being robbed and I
think we need to be more radical about
issues of corruption”. He continued “We
brought all our expertise to bear on
this investigation, but it took forever
to get people to say we are going to act
and deal with the people and issues in
our report”.
Ladies and
Gentlemen, these issues are not
perception. These are the real issues
and the real state of corruption and the
fight against corruption, in Ghana
today.
Perhaps a recount of the sentiments
experienced by real people, who are also
opinion leaders, on this state of
corruption in Ghana today will further
illustrate the situation.
President Rawlings, after the high
court acquittal of Mr. Woyome, remarked
that the prosecution presented a poor
case just to secure the acquittal and
protect some people in government, and
that 60% of thieves in the NDC
government also hold positions in the
party. He concluded with the question
“Are we so stupid? Speaking further on
the issue, in May 2015, (at WGHS event)
President Rawlings observed that
corruption today is no longer a practice
but has become a pervasive culture.”
A senior NDC official Dr. Tony Aidoo had
wondered why the NDC government cannot
ensure refund of dubious judgment debts
with the same alacrity as it pays out
the taxpayers monies.
The State-Owned Daily Graphic in its
editorial of October 3, 2014, observed:
"The canker of corruption that has
engulfed our country has become
malignant now, as those involved in the
act appear incorrigible. “It is
spreading like a tumor. As a result of
the thievery and plunder of officials,
the people are faced with numerous
challenges that otherwise could have
been taken care of by the country’s
resources.”
Hon. Alban Bagbin in November 2014
remarked that people he has mentored who
have become ministers have amassed so
much wealth it is incredible."
The Chief Justice on October 2014
commented that "everyday we read and
hear of unspeakable corruption and abuse
of public office by individuals and
institutions entrusted with public
funds. The situation has reached a
Tipping Point."
Mr Emile Short on 11th October 2014,
on Joy FM NewsFile discussion, observed
that " this frightening proportions of
corruption will continue until
government devises effective measures to
deal with it."
General Nunoo Mensah
observed last year that "corruption
today is an epidemic".
Ladies and Gentlemen, these are just
a sample of the experience of corruption
of real people who are also opinion
leaders in Ghana today.
President
Mahama has not shown the needed guts
adequate to fight corruption.
There is a clear vacuum in the
national leadership in the fight against
corruption.
This is precisely why his presidency
has seen the rise of civil society
activism, protest and engagement in the
fight against corruption.
As the
three court judgements on the Woyome
case shows, create, loot and share is
still real in this country.
This country is bleeding from the
wounds of corruption.
In this
election year, let’s all join hands and
say a big NO to corruption.
Let's
arise from this crisis.
Let’s arise for change
Nana Akomea
Director of
Communications