Audio By Carbonatix
The Minister of State in charge of Government Communications, Felix Kwakye Ofosu, has stressed that former Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta cannot be treated differently from any other citizen under Ghanaian law.
Mr Ofori-Atta served as Ghana’s Finance Minister from 2017 to 2024 under the New Patriotic Party (NPP) administration and has been at the centre of several public controversies relating to alleged financial mismanagement and procurement concerns.
In recent years, the Office of the Special Prosecutor (OSP) announced investigations into a number of transactions approved during his tenure, including revenue assurance contracts, aspects of the public debt restructuring programme, and payments made under sole-sourcing arrangements.
His lawyers have previously maintained that he remains willing to cooperate with any lawful investigative process, explaining that his temporary stay outside the country is due to health and security considerations.
Speaking in a one-on-one interview on JOYNEWS’ AM Show on Monday, January 26, Mr Kwakye Ofosu said all Ghanaians are equal before the law, and institutions that act outside legal bounds can be challenged in court.
“The former finance minister cannot be treated specially. He cannot be treated differently from how everybody else is treated. If any institution engages in conduct that is contrary to law, there’s a recourse. A court can reign in that state institution,” he said.
The Communications Minister noted that agencies such as the Economic and Organised Crime Office (EOCO), the Criminal Investigations Department (CID), or the National Intelligence Bureau (NIB) do not operate above the law. He added that if anyone believes bail terms or other conditions are unreasonable, they can petition the courts for redress.
Mr Ofori-Atta appeared before a United States court on Tuesday, January 20, following actions taken by U.S. immigration authorities over his legal status.
He was apprehended by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) on January 6, 2026, at his residence in the Westlight Building, Washington D.C., after his visa was revoked in mid-2025.
During the court hearing, immigration judge David Gardey presided over the case, which was subsequently adjourned to April 27, 2026.
The situation has sparked reactions in Ghana. On the same day, pressure group Arise Ghana staged a protest outside the United States Embassy in Accra, demanding Mr Ofori-Atta’s return to face investigations over alleged financial misconduct.
Latest Stories
-
Alisson injury not ‘a big thing’ despite missing Galatasaray
2 hours -
Scholes ‘did not intend to be offensive’ to Carrick
2 hours -
23 players sent off after mass brawl in Brazil
2 hours -
Court remands pastor over alleged child abuse images
2 hours -
Anthropic sues US government for calling it a risk
2 hours -
Live Nation reaches settlement in US monopoly case
2 hours -
G7 to take ‘necessary measures’ to support energy supplies
2 hours -
Star Assurance rewards 10 more customers in grand finale draw of “40 Reasons to Smile” promo
3 hours -
Guinea opposition leader urges ‘direct resistance’ after 40 parties dissolved
3 hours -
Suhum MP calls for sincere dialogue on labour issues, warns against politicisation
3 hours -
We have instituted measures to diversify our reserves – BoG Governor
3 hours -
Ban on pay-TV services at the Presidency in force; my office is the only place with DSTV – Kwakye Ofosu
3 hours -
Fuel prices could hit GH¢17 if the Middle East crisis persists – COMAC
4 hours -
Cedi records modest appreciation on improved liquidity, but external risks linger
4 hours -
Dr Agnes Naa Momo Lartey organises briefing meeting with Ghana’s delegation to CSW70
4 hours
