Gabby Asare Otchere-Darko
Attempts by government agents, appointees, and apparatchiks to rehash the widely condemned Agyapa Royalties deal with the ruling from the ECOWAS Court on the transaction, has been met with fierce fire from a member of the Civil Society Organization (CSO) who has strongly opposed the arrangement to collateralize the country’s mineral revenue.
Benjamin Kwabena Boakye, the Executive Director of the Africa Centre for Energy Policy (ACEP) on Wednesday night burst the bubbles of Gabby Otchere-Darko, President Nana Akufo-Addo’s powerful cousin, when he essentially told him to stop celebrating the ECOWAS Court verdict, as it is not a true reflection of the story behind Agyapa Royalties deal.
According to Mr. Boakye, the deal was going to short-change the country through the sale of as much as 49 percent of shares.
Ekow Essuman, a presidential staffer who doubles as a lawyer for the President and a member of the Minerals Income Investment Fund (MIIF) created to manage Agyapa also got his share of the flak in a ten-point response from the ACEP boss, who had earlier told Gabby “it’s not every CSO against Agyapa that was in court”.
Gabby, who the Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta, another cousin of the President used to plot the transaction which experts maintain will deny the country a direct access to proceeds from the sale of its gold and other minerals, had taken to Twitter questioning “why Transparency International, Ghana Integrity Initiative and the CSOs who went to an international court over Agyapa, have been quiet since July after their case was dismissed on all fronts”.
Gabby also sought to reply to Martin Amidu’s description of the Agyapa deal as a corrupt scheme, there was no corruption involved as far as the Agyapa deal was concerned.
The ex-Special Prosecutor had described the President as “the mother serpent of corruption” in a report on the deal and resigned thereafter.
Ken Ofori-Atta’s private company, Databank, was involved in the transaction, while Gabby had also used his private law firm Africa Legal Associates in the deal, including deciding the name of the company. The original name of the company was Asaase Royalties but had to be changed to Agyapa Royalties because it coincided with the name of Gabby’s radio station Asaase FM.
Agyapa which was registered in a tax-free haven of Jersey, a British Virgin Island with directors whose names they refused to name aside Kofi Bosompem Osafo-Maafo, son of the Senior Minister, Yaw Osafo-Marfo, as CEO at a time he was still serving as the Deputy Director General of Social Security and National Insurance Trust (SSNIT).
An investment company in South Africa, engaged by the government in the transaction was also found to be partner of the Databank. It remains a mystery to date how much the Akufo-Addo government pumped into the botched transaction.
Mr Boakye, replied Gabby saying, “The court would not know that the same lawyers that cooked the MIIF Act were the lawyers behind Agyapa” adding that “Parliament that passed the MIIF act could not anticipate the trickery in the eventual sale of 49% of royalty”.
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