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The Power Distribution Service’s debacle has been blamed on the Millennium Development Authority.
The boss of the African Centre for Energy Policy told Joy FM MiDA failed to select a company with the needed credibility to raise money to manage electricity in the country.
“If we could not raise bank guarantees how can we raise capital investment?” Benjamin Boakye questioned on the Super Morning Show Friday.
According to him, MiDA had five years to do this job and they were paid $40m for this exercise, unfortunately, they failed.
Mr Boakye also accused MiDA of failing to open up the process of having Ghanaians hold shares in PDS.
He claimed, had that been done, persons with credibility to raise money and capacity to manage the energy sector would have been onboard.
He urged MiDA to concede to failure and renounce the current concession agreement. However, it must not repeat the mistake of sideling the public and civil society in the future.
Meanwhile the Millennium Development Authority, MiDA has mounted a strong defense of its role in supervising the deal that gave PDS control of power distribution in Ghana.
“We did everything that had to be done,” Micheal Awuah head of Reforms at the Millennium Development Authority said.
He explained further that “the guarantee was issued by PDS to ECG and not to MiDA or the committee. But even then we went the extra mile to say that to protect the interest of Ghana let us make sure that ECG has direct access to Al koot when there was a problem.”
The PDS saga: The story so far The government of Ghana made a shocking announcement last week, declaring it had suspended a concessionaire agreement with a consortium called Power Distribution Service (PDS) for thirty days. The PDS had been responsible for managing the retail, and distribution business of the electricity company of Ghana since March this year. Initially, some cynics on social media thought it was a red-herring thrown into the public to serve as a distraction from tax increases announced by Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta the week before. But as the days progressed, it dawned on everyone this was more than just a diversionary tactic. ECG is back as gov’t suspends PDS agreement
John Peter Amewu is the incumbent Energy Minister
In a letter dated 21 February 2019, Cal bank wrote to the Millennium Development Authority notifying them of receipt of an amount of 8 million dollars as a deposit towards the payment of the fees and charges for the issuance of the demand guarantees for a total value of 350 million dollars. Then in May, the final installment of 4.25 million dollars was also paid from the PDS account at Cal bank. Government, however, suspended the PDS concession agreement because of suspicion that the guarantees were fake.
The information available to Joy News indicates that once Cal Bank received the payment from PDS it worked with local insurance firm, Donewell Insurance, to finance the deal. Donewell also engaged Jordanian broker, Jo Australia Reinsurance brokers who were tasked to facilitate the required payments for the acquisition of the final demand guarantees from Qatar-based insurance firm, Al Koot.
On June 24, 2019, ECG wrote to the reinsurance company Al Koot to verify the demand guarantees and ascertain the status of the issuer of the guarantees who was identified as Yahya Al-Nouri. Al Koot on July 16, 2019, through its Chief Officer, General Insurance, Osman Hag Musa, wrote to ECG alerting them to a situation of fraud in which the initial guarantee submitted was allegedly forged by an employee of the company(Yahya Al-Nouri) who lacked the capacity to issue such a guarantee.
Curiously, it emerged Al Koot had in a subsequent letter dated July 31, 2019, written to the insurance brokers (Jo Australia) notifying them of a formal cancellation of the insurance cover they guaranteed. They explained in this letter that they were cancelling the cover because the broker had not paid the premium.
The confusion throws up a number of questions and contradictions.
Where is the $12.2 million PDS paid through Cal Bank to secure the insurance cover?
Read: Exclusive: Documents reveal untraceable $12.2m paid by PDS for ECG takeover
We’ve done nothing illegal – PDS reacts to allegations
And why is Al Koot now acknowledging that it had previously agreed to provide the insurance guarantee when it had 15 days earlier written to ECG alleging the cover was procured by fraud?
Information Minister Kojo Oppong Nkrumah says a Ghanaian team of investigators is due to travel to Qatar to probe the issues further.
He contradicted fellow Minister, Peter Amewu’s statement that the government, in its bid to avoid missing the deadline for the commencement of the concession agreement, converted the demand guarantee from a condition precedent to a condition subsequent.
Mr Amewu was answering criticisms that the government had failed to do due diligence resulting in the reliance on a suspicious demand notice. He said the government found out through due diligence after the retail business was handed over to PDS in March this year.
If the government waited to do the due diligence before the takeover, it may have missed the deadline. But the Information Minister said, “For the avoidance of doubt, the provision of the payment guarantee has always been a condition precedent and was never changed to a condition subsequent as being speculated by some persons.”
Procurement Specialist Kwabena Atta Bedu has argued forcefully the government’s decision is strange to the extent even if the officer at Al Koot that signed the documents exceeded his power, that breach could easily have been remedied. He does not understand why the government took the rather extreme step of suspending the agreement simply because of an alleged breach which could be fixed.
Gov't begins inquiry into PDS breaches
Ghana’s team of investigators is in Qatar and has 30 days to conclude their probe.
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