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Tuesday, March 8, 2011

I Was Coached


Posted: Daily Guide | Tuesday, 08 March 2011
www.dailyguideghana.com
By Charles Takyi-Boadu
The man at the centre of a raging controversy over claims that some influential members of the New Patriotic Party (NPP) advised him to lie about the ‘Amina bus sex’ story, Michael Ofosu Frimpong, has made another revelation about the ongoing trial.

DAILY GUIDE has stumbled on an audio recording in which Michael Frimpong, who is now at the CID cells at the Police Headquarters, was overheard telling someone in a telephone conversation that state prosecutors made him lie against the NPP chieftains he named, during his appearance in court as a witness for the prosecution in the Amina Yutong bus mass rape saga, as those who bribed him to corroborate the Amina story.

The NPP bigwigs named in the alleged saga were party chairman Jake Obetsebi-Lamptey, Assin North MP Kennedy Agyapong, former Finance Minister Yaw Osafo Marfo and a private legal practitioner, Professor Ken Attafuah.

Frimpong related that he was picked up from his cells at the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) at the Police Headquarters by the investigator handling the case, whose name he gave as Issa Mohammed.

According to him, Mohammed took him to the office of the prosecutor, Paul Asibi Abariga, where Mr. Abariga, in-turn took him to the office of Attorney General, Martin Amidu.

At the office of the Attorney General, Frimpong said he was told that the only condition under which he could be let off the hook was if he discounted his earlier claims of being on board the said bus at the time of the incident and mentioned the names of the NPP stalwarts as those who asked him to go and make those claims on Adom FM.

Though efforts to reach Martin Amidu have proved unsuccessful, the prosecutor handling the case, Paul Abariga, has denied ever taking Frimpong to the AG’s office to cook up a story for him to tell, describing it as untrue.

“The AG does not know him by face but by the offence. He gave his evidence on his own volition and in his own handwriting which he dully signed himself,” was what he said in an interview with DAILY GUIDE last Friday.

But Frimpong insists on his claim, saying that “he (Martin Amidu) even told me that when they take every case to the court, they lose so I should help them to win this case.” Frimpong insisted that even what he said in court was written for him to rehearse before going to court.

According to the suspect, the NPP gurus had done no wrong and that his testimony was influenced by the prosecutor.

He claimed that Kennedy Agyapong was roped into the matter because they said he was a thorn in the flesh of the NDC administration.

Frimpong had earlier told DAILY GUIDE in previous conversations while at Nsawam Prisons that the police investigator had taken him to Mr Abariga’s office twice, urging him to testify for the state.

Frimpong said he was compelled by circumstances to tell the truth because he was still being held in custody despite an assurance to release him if he would implicate the NPP gurus.

“I have also been childish; I will disgrace them and I will…I am ready to face any death and I am ready to put every incident that took place at the Attorney General’s office out,” he said.

Michael Frimpong had made claims on Adom FM that he was onboard the Yutong bus on which passengers, including Amina, were made to have sex with one another at gunpoint by suspected armed robbers.
Amina was saved because she claimed she was in her menses.

Frimpong was subsequently arrested by the police after telling Great FM, an Achimota-based private radio station, the same story for allegedly ‘causing fear and alarm’- a case in which he is being prosecuted.
However, under inexplicable reasons, Frimpong later became a prosecution witness in the Amina case.

He claimed that his appearance in court was at the instance of the Attorney General who had promised dropping the charges against him if he would implicate the NPP chieftains.

The last time he appeared in court, Frimpong, among other things, alleged that he was offered GH¢90,000 (¢900million) by the named NPP men to go and corroborate Amina’s story- a claim they have all rubbished and treated with contempt.

Mr. Abariga told DAILY GUIDE “he wanted to go and get the ticket from Kumasi for the Amina case but when police sought to accompany him, he broke down and confessed that what he sought to do initially was a lie and that he was sponsored and coached by his two lawyers and those he gave their names.

“He also said when he went to Adom FM, he was going to negate Amina’s account but, upon reaching Adom FM, his sponsors asked him to rather go and corroborate Amina’s story.

I will never cook up a story because it will not only be unprofessional but also unethical because I’m not conviction-minded but a justice officer,” said the state prosecutor.

He stated, “I will not want to engage in any media trial because I know the consequences of such actions.

All I have or I believe in is that I will never want to engage in any conduct that tends to bring the authority and administration of the law into disrespect or disregard, because it is essential to maintain the existence of the legal system of any state that the court should have ample powers to enforce its orders and to protect itself or its procedure.

I desire to recognize and uphold this principle at all times as a legal practitioner and a prosecutor for that matter.”

On this basis, the state prosecutor said, “I cannot be seen to have cooked up a story in respect of the instant case because I do other cases as well and irrespective of the geographical, ethnic or partisan origin, all I do is to study a case, advise on it and possibly do prosecute where it is prosecutable as allowed by law.”

Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Asiedu Nketia’s Plush Mansions


Posted: Daily Guide | Wednesday, 02 March 2011
www.dailyguideghana.com
By Charles Takyi-Boadu
Members of the ruling National Democratic Congress (NDC) who have always demonised the New Patriotic Party’s property-owning philosophy seem to have been caught by their own deeds as many embark on a ‘property-grabbing’ mission.

Latest among several others who have been captured by DAILY GUIDE’s investigative team is none other than the General Secretary of the NDC, Johnson Asiedu-Nketiah, popularly called General Mosquito.

Apart from his block-manufacturing company which has landed him in a controversial case of conflict of interest regarding his dealings with the Bui Power Authority (BPA), the NDC General Secretary is believed to have simultaneously put up two big mansions in Accra and Kumasi within the last two years.

Mr. Asiedu-Nketiah however declined to answer queries regarding the alleged properties when contacted by DAILY GUIDE yesterday, because he claimed the newspaper had published twisted stories about him.

“I’m not talking to you because anytime you call and I tell you the truth about what I know, you still go ahead and publish things against me so you may go and publish what you want to publish,” he said amidst threats that “I will take my decision. If it is libelous, I will deal with you.”

In spite of his refusal to speak on the issue, residents of Oyarifa, a developing community along the Accra-Aburi highway where one of the imposing two-storey buildings is located, are convinced that the house belongs to the NDC General Secretary since he visited the place each day to see the level of progress of work.

Painters were busily whitewashing the edifice when DAILY GUIDE visited the site last week.

Sources say actual work on the two-storey building commenced somewhere in November 2009 and within the space of a year, it has been completed.

The only thing that is probably left would be the interior decoration since everything seems set for its owners to move in.

The house, which is touted as one of the finest in the area, is fitted with a number of air conditioners, water reservoir and satellite dish, with street lights around it.

It also has a security post attached to it. At the time DAILY GUIDE visited the site, workers were busily putting finishing touches to it, with painting almost near completion.

Mr. Asiedu-Nketiah, a native of Seikwa, who currently lives in the centre of Accra, visits the project site each day.

Residents of the area, which is sprouting with new buildings, expressed surprise at the speed with which the building was completed, considering the fact that several of such types of buildings in the area which began long before that of General Mosquito’s were nowhere near completion.

Most of these residents said they did not know the owner of the building until they started seeing General Mosquito when the work started moving at a fast pace.

He is also said to have put up another plush mansion at Daaban Panyin, a suburb of Kumasi.

This other two-storey building is believed to have taken six months to construct and it is almost near completion, with a boy’s quarters. Landscaping is already being done at top speed.

Residents alleged the materials used for the construction of the building, including bags of cement, were usually sent to the project site in articulated trucks, with a man suspected to be his brother supervising.

General Mosquito was said to have usually visited the Daaban building site in the night, probably to avoid prying eyes.

Checks by DAILY GUIDE revealed that the land on which the building is situated was initially owned by government but later on reverted to the Kaase stool, the original owners of the Daaban Panyin lands.

Due to the lavish nature of the building, residents told DAILY GUIDE, several developers trooped to the site to take photographs of the building, with the view to replicating the plan.

When DAILY GUIDE visited the site, the watchman in whose care the building was, was busily working on the lawn outside the house.

DAILY GUIDE was told the needed materials had already been brought in, expected to have been fixed by now.

Friday, February 25, 2011

Rawlings Flares Up


Posted: Daily Guide | Friday, 25 February 2011
www.dailyguideghana.com
By Charles Takyi-Boadu
Former President Jerry John Rawlings yesterday broke loose at the Constitution Review Commission’s sitting scheduled for him when he was heard shouting.

His attitude therefore broke the code of silence associated with the high-profile personalities’ (including former and incumbent Presidents and their Vices) sessions with the commissioners to make their inputs into the review of the country’s 1992 constitution.

When Mr. Rawlings arrived at the Commission’s office at Cantonments around 11:30am in the company of his special aide, Kofi Adams, he exchanged pleasantries with the commissioners before the hearing, which was a closed session, began.

All seemed to be going well until Mr. Rawlings, under whose tenure as a military dictator the current constitution came into being, was overheard shouting at the meeting.

It is not clear what might have triggered his sudden outburst since details of the meeting were not made public.

After almost two hours, the former President, also the founder of the ruling National Democratic Congress (NDC), came out of the meeting with members of the Commission and had a brief interaction with the media before driving away.

His aide declined to answer questions from the media and also drove off.

Though speculations were rife that some comments by some members of the Commission could have startled Mr. Rawlings, CRC’s Executive Secretary, Dr. Raymond Atuguba, said the former President was not provoked and that the raising of his voice was his usual way of talking.

“You know the man. That is the way he talks,” was what he told DAILY GUIDE when contacted.

However, it was generally rumoured that the mention of the ‘Indemnity Clauses’ in the constitution might have ruffled his feathers. The indemnity clauses are a part of the Transitional Provisions of the Constitution which provide blanket protection for all coup makers in the various military administrations which toppled constitutionally and democratically elected governments.

Mr. Rawlings said the meeting went well and members of the Commission were very receptive.

Asked whether the country’s Constitution had been tried and tested enough to warrant a review as being done, he said, “This happens once in a while as a result of changing circumstances, okay and if there is the need for something to be altered, it would be okay, if there is no need for it, it would not. But I think the opportunity ought to be created for it and I believe this is what has been done.”

The commissioners met President Mills at the Castle yesterday even though it was not clear if they took his views on the review or not.

Meanwhile, the Commission is expected to hold a week’s national conference from Tuesday, 1st March 2011 at the Accra International Conference Center.

The conference, which would be addressed by President Mills, is expected to serve as a representative national platform where the over 75,000 submissions received and processed will be tabled for national debate.

It is also expected to bring together persons with expert knowledge on the various thematic areas gathered by the submissions to assist the conference to arrive at options for constitutional redesign.

The submissions received so far have been synthesized into 12 thematic areas. These have been further broken down into some 77 sub themes and about 548 issues and would be tabled for a national debate.

Participants at the conference are being drawn from the public, private and civil society organizations.

Identifiable groups such as political parties, youth groups, gender groups, persons with disability, children, professional bodies and associations, Ministries, Departments and Agencies (MDAs), private sector as well as eminent persons, facilitators and national and international consultants are expected to participate.