Audio By Carbonatix
Former Deputy Attorney General Alfred Tuah Yeboah has insisted that the prosecution of persons involved in the collapse of uniBank was not only justified but already well underway before the current Attorney General, Dr Dominic Ayine, took over.
Speaking on The Pulse on JoyNews, Mr Tuah Yeboah responded to recent comments by the Attorney General suggesting that the case lacked strength and had little chance of success.
He firmly rejected that view, stating, "Respectfully, I disagree with the learned AG. This case happened in 2020. We called the receiver; in fact, he was our star witness."
Explaining further, he said, "The receiver appointed by the BoG; he went through the books and came out with the figures that we used in filing the charge sheet. He came to testify; he was pre-examined. We also called our second witness, PW2. So if there is this saying that we didn’t do anything apart from filing it, that cannot be true."
Mr Tuah Yeboah also addressed claims that no money had been recovered from the case.
"A point has been made that no recovery was made. The AG knows that before he took over, GH₵300 million, the amount that we charged the BoG with, has been recovered," he stated.
He stressed that despite a recovery of funds, the case should have gone forward to ensure justice was served.
"We had the view that if someone did something untoward regarding finances, and we are able to recover even 100%, the next step must be taken to also, in a way, punish the person, either getting the person in prison or letting the person pay interest in addition to the original amount," he argued.
Mr Tuah Yeboah defended the work that had already been done on the case, pointing out that it went through different levels of the legal system.
"This is a case where we took a serious test; we filed our charges and lined up our witnesses to prosecute it. It went to the Court of Appeal; it came back, and we reached various objections."
Read also: Why Dr Ayine collected 60% of assets and dropped charges against Dr Duffuor in UniBank case
Reacting directly to the Attorney General’s claim that the charges were weak and the possibility of conviction was minimal, Mr Tuah Yeboah said, "I heard the AG say that he has examined the file and realised that the charges are weak and the possibility of conviction was very minimal. I beg to differ."
Latest Stories
-
The Draft NITA Bill should be shredded
13 minutes -
Govt signals tougher scrutiny before renewing Gold Fields’ Tarkwa lease, Reuters report
27 minutes -
Africa must build strong systems to achieve sporting success — Herbert Mensah
31 minutes -
Gunmen abduct 25 people in twin attacks in Nigeria’s Kwara state, police say
43 minutes -
Ebola patients flee in attacks on Congo health facilities, hobbling response
51 minutes -
What Is Wrong with Us: Why we keep uprooting young trees because they have not yet become forests
52 minutes -
Senegal’s parliament speaker quits two days after prime minister sacked
1 hour -
WHO chief says fast-moving Ebola epidemic is outpacing response efforts
1 hour -
Rubio says Strait of Hormuz has to be open ‘one way or the other’Â
1 hour -
Cocoa farmers, patients and consumers paying price for governance failures – CDM
2 hours -
Farmers are watching food rot – Group warns of deepening food glut crisis
2 hours -
Completed but locked: CDM slams gov’t over Weija Children’s Hospital
2 hours -
Pope Leo says AI must be ‘disarmed’ in first major teaching
5 hours -
Jordan leads star names at Guardiola leaving party
5 hours -
Allegri sacked after season of ‘unequivocal failure’
5 hours