Audio By Carbonatix
The Minority has announced its intention to take legal action against the Attorney General, Dr. Dominic Ayine, over his decision to discontinue the criminal prosecution of defunct uniBank founder, Dr. Kwabena Duffuor.
The Attorney General last week revealed that the State had successfully recovered 60% of the funds involved in the criminal case, and therefore found no additional public interest in pursuing the prosecution further.
The case, which formed part of the government's broader financial sector clean-up exercise, had charged Dr. Duffuor with offenses including theft and money laundering in relation to over GHs 663 million in liquidity support disbursed to uniBank prior to its collapse.
However, addressing journalists in Parliament, Minority Spokesperson on Constitutional and Legal Affairs, Kwame Anyimadu, expressed strong opposition to the move, describing it as a threat to justice and accountability. He called on key institutions and stakeholders to act urgently.
“We are calling on the Parliament of Ghana, particularly the Select Committee on Constitutional, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs, to summon the Attorney General to publicly answer for this decision,” Mr. Anyimadu said.
He also demanded that the General Legal Council and the Ghana Bar Association investigate the Attorney General for what he described as “potential breaches of legal ethics and professional conduct.”
“All patriotic Ghanaians must stand up against what appears to be the erosion of justice and the dangerous politicization of the prosecutorial process,” he added.
Mr. Anyimadu further indicated that if the Attorney General does not reverse the decision “within a reasonable time,” the Minority will proceed to court to challenge it.
“Let this press conference also serve as formal notice to the Attorney General, Dr. Dominic Ayine, that if his decision is not reversed, the Minority will consider its options, including legal action to challenge the decision in its entirety,” he warned.
He concluded by invoking the principle of judicial fairness, stating: “Justice must not only be done, but it must be manifestly seen to be done.”
The announcement adds to growing public scrutiny of the Attorney General’s handling of high-profile financial crimes, particularly in the wake of similar decisions, such as the recent nolle prosequi entered in the case against Dr. Duffuor.
Latest Stories
-
Unrepentant NPP doesn’t deserve to return to power – Arthur Kennedy
7 minutes -
WAEC rules out exception for 154 Sekondi College students barred from exam
18 minutes -
Education must serve national development, not create elites – Baffour Awuah
18 minutes -
Government contemplating to reduce admissions to health training institutions to address employment backlog – Health Minister
21 minutes -
Moderate to heavy rains expected across parts of Ghana – GMet warns
26 minutes -
Punishment must be part of any Wontumi plea deal – Arthur Kennedy
27 minutes -
UK vows to phase out Russian diesel and jet fuel imports by new year
47 minutes -
US kills leader of Venezuela’s Tren de Aragua gang in airstrike, Trump says
50 minutes -
Deal to end fighting would lead to Hormuz reopening, Iran says
53 minutes -
Elon Musk’s stratospheric rise to trillionaire status – in charts
57 minutes -
Beyond the goals! Resetting financial accountability and public trust in Ghana’s World Cup journey
2 hours -
Ensign Global University and Engage Now Africa leads call for action on Albinism awareness and inclusion
2 hours -
Sales boy captured on CCTV cameras stealing, jailed 36 months
3 hours -
‘Life moves fast; make every day count’ — Prof Ofori-Dankwa advises youth
3 hours -
Veteran Nollywood actor, Kola Oyewo dies
4 hours