Audio By Carbonatix
Chairman of the Minerals Income Investment Fund has dared the minority to report the Agyapa Royalties deal to the authorities at the London Stock Exchange if they suspect any mishaps in the controversial arrangement.
George Mireku Duker opined that it is a trend adopted by the opposition National Democratic Congress to ensure that all transactions initiated by the government do not see the light of day.
The agreement between the Agyapa Royalties Limited and government is expected to streamline the investment and utilisation of the country’s mineral royalties and channeled in the development of critical areas of education, health, housing and infrastructure.
A cross section of the general public and some civil society organisations have raised concerns about the company which was incorporated in Jersey, a tax haven with the minority threatening to abrogate the deal if it assumed office in the December elections.
Ranking Member on Parliament’s Finance Committee Cassiel Ato Forson has recently threatened to write to the Financial Conduct Authority and the London Stock Exchange over the controversial deal.
“We are not petitioning them. We are putting them on notice that we the members of the minority believe that thus deal is not in a transparent manner. We believe that there are things this administration is hiding from us… We believe the value has been understated,” he said.
But the Member of Parliament for Tarkwa-Nsuaem, Mireku Duker is calling his bluff explaining that “NDC will continue ranting this way and wouldn’t want Ghana to succeed in any deal.”
“NDC wrote letters in the Sinohydro Deal, they walked out of parliament during the NHIS and I’m reassuring Ghanaians that we have nothing to hide,” Mr Duker said.
The new agreement will enable the country to use a Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV), Agyapa Royalties Limited, to secure about $1 billion to finance infrastructural projects.
Describing the deal as a fair one, the MP told JoyNews the deal is transparent and will accelerate the development of Ghana.
“It is something that is really going to propel the engine of growth for this country. It is something that we need to support wholeheartedly,” he added.
The agreement said to be in line with the Minerals Income Investment Fund (MIIF) Act, 2018 (Act 978), was passed without support from the Minority in Parliament.
Latest Stories
-
Lamborghini Saga: EOCO boss has tarnished my brand and cost me business deals – Shatta Wale
1 hour -
Mugabe’s son drops bail request – what has happened to the family after losing power
1 hour -
Tyla deserved to win Grammy ahead of Nigerian artists – Joeboy
2 hours -
Ishmael Norman hails Interior Minister for choosing merit over politics in security recruitment
2 hours -
Iranian minister says country will not play in World Cup
2 hours -
No evidence Swiss bus fire was terrorism, officials say
2 hours -
Three brothers arrested after explosion at US embassy in Oslo
2 hours -
‘Disgusting but not surprising’: Domelevo demands dismissal, prosecution of officials in GH¢8.1bn audit rot
2 hours -
Nitiwul sounds alarm over Sokoto strike: Claims Ablakwa’s disclosure exposes Ghana to terror risk
2 hours -
Police arrest suspect for defilement, possession of child sexual abuse materials
3 hours -
Security services recruitment: Ntim Fordjour accuses Interior Ministry of milking over GH¢100m from applicants
3 hours -
Why risk protection is the unsung partner of growth for Ghana’s SMEs, households
3 hours -
New US ambassador to South Africa summoned over ‘undiplomatic remarks’
3 hours -
Three firms roll out AI-powered security platform for financial institutions
3 hours -
My passion for technology began in childhood – Shatta Wale
3 hours
