Audio By Carbonatix
The Executive Director of the Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA), Sulemana Braimah, has criticised the Attorney-General’s decision to accept a partial recovery of funds in the case involving former Finance Minister Dr Kwabena Duffuor and seven others over the collapse of uniBank.
The Attorney-General’s Department defended its decision, citing a 60% recovery of funds and assets from the accused as justification for halting further prosecution, arguing it no longer served the public interest.
While Mr Braimah acknowledged that the decision to enter a nolle prosequi may be legally strategic, he argued that settling for only 60% recovery undermines public accountability and emboldens potential offenders.
Speaking on Joy FM’s Super Morning Show, he said the approach could create the impression that individuals can misappropriate public funds and still benefit.
“I think if we are going this way, if I misappropriate GHS100 million or something to that effect, and then in the end, I know that the system is such that if I put forward even not 60% but 70% of whatever has been taken, I am going to do away with 30%,” he stated.
“If it involves GHS100 million and I manage to give out GHS70 million, I can keep the GHS30 million for free — then that is an incentive to engage in all sorts of things,” he added.
Mr Braimah cautioned that such settlements, if not properly justified and transparently managed, risk eroding public confidence in the justice system and in the State’s anti-corruption efforts.
“Is that the kind of country we want to build, where it is okay to steal, loot, or misappropriate? If you are not caught, you get away with it, and if you are caught, you refund 60% or 70% and keep the rest? Is that why we are involved in this fight against corruption?” he bemoaned.
He further warned that the lack of deterrent sanctions in such high-profile financial crime cases could set a dangerous precedent.
“If this is how we're going to go about it, then there is actually an incentive to steal from the State, because there is no sanction, there is no deterrent, there is no accountability, just refund what you have looted, not even all of it, just part… then, really, I think there is an incentive for many people to do a lot of things against this country.”
The Attorney-General recently entered a nolle prosequi in the case The Republic v. Kwabena Duffuor & 7 Others, citing substantial asset recovery as part of a broader non-conviction-based strategy under Operation Recover All Loots (ORAL).
Latest Stories
-
The 17-hour miracle: Black Sherif beats logistical marathon to pull off historic Zaama Disco 2025
5 minutes -
NPP Primaries: Electoral area coordinators in Ada, Sege declare support for Bawumia
40 minutes -
PSG marks 90 years with Maiden Dinner and Awards Night
47 minutes -
Volta, Oti pharmacists sound alarm over staff shortages, call for action
52 minutes -
Police foil suspected robbery at Ashaiman; 3 suspects killed
58 minutes -
Forest Okyeman: Communities rise to defend one of Ghana’s last ecological strongholds
1 hour -
AFCON 2025: South Africa start tournament with win over Angola
2 hours -
Why Ghana’s insurance laws still fail claimants, according to new KNUST research
2 hours -
GPL 2025/26: Medeama score late to draw with Basake Holy Stars
2 hours -
Rapperholic Creators challenge blends digital talent and financial discipline for Ghanaian youth
2 hours -
Justice on a leash – Minority claims law enforcement is being used to punish political opponents
2 hours -
Dr Gideon Boako provides ¢10k seed capital for TanoFest Programme
2 hours -
Bond market: Turnover rose by 64.39% to GH¢6.75bn
3 hours -
Dutylex promises more in 2026; targets market expansion
3 hours -
Government grants permits for Responsible Cooperative Mining in Anwia, Teleku Bokazo
3 hours
