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OSP should rather handle ORAL report, not A-G – Mussa Dankwah


In order for the investigations and prosecutions to be depoliticised, the report of Operation Recover All loots (ORAL) should have rather been handed over to the Office of the Special Prosecutor (OSP), not the Attorney-General, Mussa Dankwah Executive Director of Global InfoAnalytics Mussa Dankwah has said.

Mussa Dankwa explained that the ORAL cases will travel beyond the 4-year term of President John Dramani Mahama and since nobody can determine what will happen in the next election in 2028, there is a risk of nolle prosequi to be filed in 2029 if NDC does not win the elections.

“As a result, I think the Attorney General should resource and strengthen the OSP to take on several of these potential political ORAL cases so that we can be assured that those trials will continue beyond the government’s term,” he wrote on Facebook.

The ORAL Committee says it has identified  $21.19 billion in potential recoveries from looted state assets and undervalued land sales.

During the presentation of the committee’s report to the President at the seat of Government in Accra on Monday, February 10, ORAL Chairman Samuel Okudzeto Ablakwa said that if the country is able to recover this amount, there will be no need to go to the International Moneyray Fund for support.

“If we are successful in recoveries, we can retrieve as much as 20.49 billion United States dollars,” he stated. These cases include major corruption scandals involving the National Cathedral project, Power Distribution Services (PDS), and the Saltpond decommissioning project, among others,” Mr Ablakwa said.

President John Mahama also indicated after receiving the report that ” Ghaa I no longer a safe haven for corruption.”

He accordingly forwarded the report to the Attorney-General for further actions.

But in his Facebook post, Mussa Dankwa said “I am not a lawyer but I understand enough to make suggestions on how to proceed with ORAL having witnessed the legal gymnastics in this country. We can’t assume that NDC will win the 2028 elections and we can’t wait for the Attorney General’s role to be split from that of state prosecution. These ORAL cases will travel beyond the 4 year term and therefore there is a risk of nolle prosequi to be filed in 2029 if NDC does not win the 2028 elections.

“As a result, I think the Attorney General should resource and strengthen the OSP to take on several of these potential political ORAL cases so that we can be assured that those trials will continue beyond the government’s term.  While JDM, through his Attorney General has discontinued several court cases due to what is perceived to be witch hunting, we also saw few nolle prosiqui filings during Nana Addo’s terms but many of the cases did not even make their to charges being filed, therefore, both administration can be accused of acting as clearing agents with various levels of degrees.”

He added that “These challenges have arisen because successive governments have not prioritize the separation of Attorney-General’s role from state prosecution. So, for now, the surest bet to ensure continuation of prosecutions is to use the OSP.

“This will avoid accusation of political witch hunt since the OSP is a former government appointee and secondly, to ensure that prosecutions will continue even if there is change of government until we have an amended constitution.”



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