Audio By Carbonatix
The Executive Director of the Centre for Democratic Development, (CDD-Ghana) has said the back and forth between the presidency and former Special Prosecutor, Martin Amidu could have been avoided.
Prof. Henry Kwasi Prempeh said certain details were taken for granted and subsequently blew the issues regarding the differences between the two out of proportion.
According to him, this gave Martin Amidu the grounds to state the delay of his appointment letter as a case in his resignation.
Speaking on Joy News' Newsfile current affairs show Saturday, he told host, Samson Lardy Ayenini that the bureaucracy around setting up offices needs reforms.
“I think in a lot of this public drama could have been avoided if things were done in their right sequence and at the right time.
“What will it take at the time of his appointment to just deliver his letter of appointment to him?” he quizzed.
This comes after the Special Prosecutor resigned from his position on November 16, 2020, three years after he was appointed by President Akufo-Addo.
However, Prof. Prempeh disagreed with the process by which an office building and logistics were obtained for Mr. Amidu and his team which allegedly involved his personal involvement after appointment.
In his view, the office should have been delivered to him when he was appointed then, any changes as directed would be made later.
“I don't think it a proper practice to actually appoint a person to an office and then let that person no matter who they are, be the one doing the legwork of finding places and stuff like that.
"That process is a bit baffling to me, it doesn't speak well of the process,” he said Saturday.
In his letter of resignation, the former Attorney-General stated that “The events of 12th November 2020 removed the only protection I had from the threats and plans directed at me for undertaking the Agyapa Royalties Limited transactions anti-corruption assessment report and dictates that I resign as the Special Prosecutor immediately.”
Mr Amidu's move has been met with opposing reactions with some social commentators saying the country's fight against corruption has been lost.
Latest Stories
-
Real Madrid stunned by second division Albacete in Copa del Rey
4 minutes -
Amateur stuns world’s best Jannik Sinner to win A$1m in Melbourne
22 minutes -
FBI searches home of Washington Post reporter in classified documents probe
53 minutes -
Trump administration pauses immigrant visa processing for 75 countries
54 minutes -
UK–Ghana crack down on immigration crime as fugitive smuggler jailed
1 hour -
Ghana’s Benjamin Arhin shines on Internacional debut with Man of the Match display
1 hour -
Stanbic Bank Ghana maintain top rank in Customer Experience Leadership in 2025 KPMG Assessment
1 hour -
Newmont-backed AI smart lab powers Kona D/A students to victory at Ghana Robotics Competition
2 hours -
Venezuelan acting president says hundreds of prisoners have been released since December
2 hours -
Nilex Suites holds first open house ahead of official launch
2 hours -
We’re far from Ofori-Atta’s extradition – Frank Davies responds to Ablakwa
2 hours -
Judicial Service, Finance Ministry summoned ahead of JUSAG strike
3 hours -
Takoradi Port to receive largest bulk carrier ever to berth in West Africa
3 hours -
Mane hits winner as Senegal end Salah’s Afcon bid
3 hours -
NLC summons Finance ministry, Judicial service over JUSAG’s 8-month salary arrears
4 hours
