Audio By Carbonatix
Special Prosecutor Martin Amidu has disclosed some anomalies detected in government’s transaction with the Agyapa Minerals Royalties Limited.
In his Corruption Risk Assessment report which was published on Monday, Mr Amidu stated that there was reasonable suspicion of bid-rigging and corruption activity in the selection process of the deal.
According to the Special Prosecutor, upon analyzing the transaction document, he uncovered that the arrangements lacked transparency.
“The analysis of the risk of corruption, and anti-corruption assessment in the bid selection process led to the assessment that the involvement of Imam Corporate Finance Limited (Pty) of South Africa in the Mandate Agreement as approved by the Public Procurement Authority made the Mandate Agreement an international business or economic transaction needing approval from Parliament under Article 181(5) which was never sought or given.”
“Secondly, the whole of the fees for the bid purportedly won by Imara of South Africa with its decoy. Databank of Ghana is to be paid in United States Dollars to Imams Corporate Finance Limited (Pty) of South Africa. The Mandate Agreement does not say how and when the decoy, Databank of Ghana, was to be paid by Imam for a contract purportedly won and performed jointly,” he explained.
Mr Amidu then added that the Finance Ministry eluded the approval of the Public Procurement Authority stated in the Public Procurement Authority Act 2003 (Act 663) and amended by Act 2016 (Act 914) (Act 663 as amended).
This, he says, concludes that “the process of the selection of the Transaction Advisor(s) disclosed a reasonable suspicion of bid-rigging and corruption activity including the potential for illicit financial flows and money laundering in the arrangement of the fees payable to Databank of Ghana as the decoy.”
Already, President Akufo-Addo has instructed that the Finance Minister returns to Parliament to reconsider the arrangement in the transaction with the Agyapa Mineral Royalties Limited.
The President’s instruction came moments after the Office of the Special Prosecutor communicated its view in the corruption risk assessment conducted into the transaction.
According to Martin Amidu, the process was concluded as far back as October 15 and was forwarded to the Presidency on the same day although a copy was sent to the Finance Ministry on October 16.
Latest Stories
-
Minority demands report of anti-flood taskforce for Parliamentary scrutiny
41 seconds -
GH¢50m recapitalisation: Microfinance Companies plead for more time as Dec. 2026 deadline looms
8 minutes -
Agenda 111 hospitals ready for operationalisation; gov’t must act – Dr Nsiah-Asare
12 minutes -
We couldn’t complete Afari Military Hospital due to contractual dispute – Ayew Afriyie
22 minutes -
Built environment professionals call for metropolitan governance reforms to address Ghana’s urban challenges
33 minutes -
NLA staff give management 14 days to resolve grievances or face strike
43 minutes -
Previous gov’t prioritised Agenda 111 over completion of Afari, Sewua Hospitals – Health Committee Chair
45 minutes -
Stock market jitters remain amid tech fears and renewed Middle East attacks
45 minutes -
GPCC urges Parliament to restore original Anti-Gay Bill
48 minutes -
Two women petition Mahama to sack Ashanti Regional Minister over sexually offensive post targeting Akosua Manu
51 minutes -
SG Ghana reports strong 2025 performance as profit reaches GH¢397m
1 hour -
I will never get over watching my home of 13 years burn down
1 hour -
Manhunt under way in South Africa after 12 killed in mass shooting in Johannesburg
1 hour -
US inflation surges to three-year high of 4.2%
1 hour -
Trump says US will hit Iran ‘hard’ again on Wednesday
1 hour