Audio By Carbonatix
Communications Minister Haruna Iddrisu has promised government does not intend to revoke the deal in which 70% of its share in Ghana Telecom was offloaded to UK-based Vodafone Plc.
Speaking to Joy News’ Kojo Oppong-Nkrumah Mr. Iddrisu said government will not provide disincentive to foreign investments in the country.
“This review is being done with good faith, without malice, without prejudice and it is not for me as Minister of Communications to review the decision of the sovereign Parliament,” he stressed.
He mentioned “an inter-ministerial committee [will] examine the issues and provisions and make recommendations to government.”
According to the minister, government will after studying the report decide whether or not to request Parliament to review some of the provisions of the committee.
Although he insists it will be wrong to “prejudge the work of the committee,” Mr Iddrisu said government only seeks to make good its promise of ensuring there were no underhand dealings in the transaction.
The minister restated the issues the committee will find answers to, which include the actual cost “in monetary terms” that the state obtained from the deal.
Government also seeks to satisfy itself with some alleged huge liabilities that were not declared during the signing of the contract.
Meanwhile a commercial in Accra has adjourned the case in which six persons are kicking against the sale of Ghana Telecom to Vodafone.
The case was filed by six people including a former director-general of the Ghana Health Service, Prof. Agyeman Badu Akosa and the publicity secretary of the Convention People’s Party, Kosi Dede.
The six filed the writ following the controversy that greeted government’s intention to offload 70% of its interest in Ghana Telecom to UK-based Vodafone and the subsequent ratification of the deal.
Joy News sources say the Attorney-General, one of the defendants in the case, is opposed to the writ.
She was not in court when the case was called on Tuesday.
The court hearing follows government’s announcement that a committee is to be set up to investigate the terms of the contract.
A former Deputy Communications Minister, Fred Opare Ansah has warned government must tread cautiously.
Story by Fiifi Koomson/Myjoyonline.com
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Strong macroeconomic recovery shields Ghana as IMF gold audit sparks debate
5 minutes -
NYA hands over pick-ups to NAP coordinators for monitoring
9 minutes -
Family of Nana Konadu Agyeman-Rawlings dismisses circulating ‘will’ as false
17 minutes -
Accra ranks 8th most expensive city in Africa in 2026 as cost-of-living pressures persist
19 minutes -
KMA steps up inspection of food joints over sanitation concerns
21 minutes -
Ghanaian PhD scholars suspend UK protest after high-stakes diplomatic talks with High Commissioner
24 minutes -
Latif Iddrisu Case: Police witness struggles to substantiate claim of identification parade
32 minutes -
Water shortage hits parts of Kumasi following Owabi Plant shutdown
45 minutes -
NPP primaries: APL final survey tips Bawumia for clear victory
54 minutes -
Antoine Semenyo and the Ballon d’Or question
58 minutes -
US lawsuit claims WhatsApp can read private messages
1 hour -
Multimedia Group vs. Kennedy Agyapong: Court adjourns defamation trial to February 11
1 hour -
1,033 excavators now tracked as government tightens grip on illegal mining
1 hour -
First Sky to build 50 churches nationwide by year-end as solar project advances
1 hour -
Gov’t to roll out Land Banks Initiative to boost large-scale agriculture – Lands Minister
2 hours
