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Thursday, March 25, 2010

Asabee sues Raymond Archer


Posted: Daily Guide |Wednesday, 24 March 2010

By Charles Takyi-Boadu
THE WOES of the Editor-In-Chief of The Enquirer newspaper, Raymond Archer, seem to be far from ending as former Information and National Orientation Minister, Stephen Asamoah-Boateng, has sued him for a whopping amount of GH¢ 1million in damages for defamation.

This follows a story published in the Wednesday September 23 to Thursday September 24, 2009 edition of The Enquirer newspaper under the headline “Busted: Asabee’s juju act, now see why Attorney General is under spell”.

In an order of substituted service, which was published in yesterday’s edition of the Daily Graphic newspaper, lawyers for Mr. Asamoah-Boateng, Sam Okudzeto and Associates, noted that the defendants; Raymond Acher, together with The Enquirer and publishers of the paper, Focal Media Limited, falsely and maliciously wrote, printed and published his photograph in a manner that ridiculed him in the estimation of the right-thinking members of the society, indicating that the former minister is a ‘jujuman’.

In the said publication, the paper made reference that “Asabee arrives @ the Fast Track High Court, and then heads for his car booth instead of walking to the courtroom”, “Asabee then pulls from his bag a yellow bottle which he poured into his left hand as he recites some incantations”.

The paper is also quoted as having written; “Asabee rubs the concoctions on his forehead as he enters into a period of chanting” and “Asabee finally shifts into a higher gear and with a clenched fist goes into more chanting, check side pictures 1 to 4”.

In his statement of claim, Mr. Asamoah-Boateng, popularly referred to as Asabee, is praying the court to place an injunction to restrain the defendants or their agents from further publication of the said untruths or any of them or any other of them or any similar false words or libel against him.

Asabee noted that in their natural and ordinary meaning, the words meant and were understood to mean that he practices black magic, he has by means of black magic cast a spell on the Attorney-General, who is prosecuting him for alleged criminal offences at the Fast Track High Court, to disable her from successfully prosecuting him because she started with 12 charges against him, reduced it to 7 and then 2 charges.

He also averred that the contents of the publication were given wide media attention without any proper investigations or interview with plaintiff to confirm or otherwise deny the allegations, stressing that the said words, which are false, referred and were understood to refer to him.

The plaintiff declared that he is a practicing Christian and that this fact is known to all his friends and family members, both home and abroad, his political party members and other political parties.

By this publication, Asabee claims that he will be seen as a hypocrite who does not practice his religion but rather dabbles in occultism and voodooism, which is an anathema within his community and the class of people he associates with.

Aside that, he noted that not only has his reputation been injured, it has also been brought into public scandal, odium and contempt, indicating that they published the story out of spite.

That notwithstanding, he said the words in the publication were meant to disparage his reputation among the Ghanaian public, who will believe that he did commit the crimes he was charged with and is using black magic to shield himself from prosecution.

For this reason, Mr. Asamoah-Boateng claims that he has been put to public ridicule and made to suffer damage and therefore seeks the reliefs from the court.

He has consequently asked the court to cause Mr. Archer and the paper to retract the said publication and render an apology to be delivered in four issues of the Daily Graphic, the papers that carried the story, as well as on radio stations where the news item were serialized.

2 Chiefs, Wulomo Killed

Posted: Daily Guide |Wednesday, 24 March 2010

By Charles Takyi-Boadu
Three persons, including a chief and traditional priest (Wulomo), were reported dead in Denkyira, a village near Weija, on the outskirts of Accra yesterday, in the latest chieftaincy skirmishes that have rocked the country in recent times.

Just Monday evening, a chief was butchered by unidentified assailants in a Tamale suburb over a similar chieftaincy dispute.

Weija District Police Commander, Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP) Kwame Afari, told DAILY GUIDE that some of the deceased persons were shot with guns whiles others were slaughtered with machetes in a manner akin to what happened in Tamale.

According to him, the deaths were the result of clashes between two rival chiefs and their supporters over a parcel of land.

In the heat of the clashes, several houses were said to have been torched with people fleeing for their lives.

The town was said to be a ghost town now, with able-bodied men taking to their heels for fear of being arrested.

Though details of the exact cause of the clashes were still sketchy, the District Commander expressed suspicion that an existing chieftaincy dispute in the village could have resulted in the clashes since two factions were laying claim to the stool.

One person was said to have been seriously injured and rushed to the hospital for treatment.

Brother to one of the deceased persons, Emmanuel Allotey Papoe, narrated that his brother and some of his colleagues were on the disputed land, winning sand when the supposed landguards came to attack them without any provocation.

When news reached the Weija Police, they dispatched some men there who managed to arrest seven people in relation to the clashes.

At the time of filing this report, calm was said to have returned to the village whilst a team of policemen was dispatched from the Kaneshie Divisional Police Command to provide reinforcement.

Virtually all the men in the village were said to have fled, leaving behind only women and children, making the village a ‘ghost town’.
Later, the Kaneshie Divisional Commander, Chief Superintendent Avedetsi, was said to have gone to the village in the company of a patrol team.

Friday, March 19, 2010

Betty Mould Is Hot


Posted: Daily Guide |Friday, 19 March 2010

By Charles Takyi-Boadu
ATTORNEY-GENERAL and Minister of Justice, Betty Mould Iddrisu has been compelled by prevailing circumstances and pressures from within her own party to explain why she has been unable to prosecute members of the erstwhile New Patriotic Party (NPP) administration.

In a statement issued in Accra yesterday, she reaffirmed her commitment to President Mills’ principle of justice within the confines of the law.

Despite unnecessary calls from members of her own party, the National Democratic Congress (NDC), including a former Supreme Court judge, Justice Kpegah, for her to quickly take cases involving members of the NPP administration to court, Betty the ‘sweet-talker’ said she is following the principles of thoroughly investigating cases rather than pushing them to court only for them to fail the litmus test.

Mrs. Mould Iddrisu said President Mills has clearly spelt out her duties, and believes she is acting in the best interest of the state and all the people involved.

She noted with emphasis that “even the NPP who made much noise about jailing NDC ministers when they came to power were unable to do so with ease despite the rhetoric”, stressing the cases involving Tsatsu Tsikata and Mrs. Rawlings needed to be both thorough and fair rather than to make mistakes with haste.

Despite talk about several allegations of wrong-doing established by the transitional team against former government officials in the NPP administration, the embattled Attorney-General noted that the investigators have not yet been able to furnish her office with findings for prosecution.

This, she said, was due to the fact that “most of the ministries and agencies that were due to provide information and evidence for prosecution are still investigating these matters to ensure that prosecutions did not encounter any hitches”.

Mrs. Mould Iddrisu also indicated that despite a memo from the Chief of Staff to the various ministries to provide necessary evidence to investigate 49 corruption cases arising out of the transitional team’s report, only the Transport Ministry has responded.

She however noted that state investigations departments such as the CID, the BNI and the SFO which are expected to feed her office with facts have so many challenges hampering their work.

The Attorney-General has thus described as unfortunate some of the criticism about her competency.
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Betty Mould Iddrisu has recently come under a barrage of criticism from within her own party about her inability to prosecute former ministers of state alleged to have mismanaged or misappropriated public funds.

Some of her critics have attributed her inaction to her close relation with some of them - a suggestion she has denied.
She has however indicated that her office is working together with other state institutions on a government White Paper to commence prosecution on the recommendations of the Ghana @ 50 Commission against Dr. Charles Wereko Brobby and Former Chief of Staff, Kwadwo Mpiani.