Former Ghanan National Petroleum Corporation (GNPC) Chief Executive, Tsatsu Tsikata, has filed a case at the Appeals Court challenging his sentence for wilfully causing financial loss to the state.
Mr Tsikata holds that the verdict that led to his imprisonment was unreasonable and was not supported by evidence.
According to him, the trial judge also erred in law in referring to extraneous matter that was not part of the record in her judgement.
“The trial judge claimed that accused was a member of the Provisional National Defence Council (PNDC) government, a matter which had no relevance to the case before her and on which no evidence had been led,” he stated in his grounds of appeal, filed at the Court of Appeal on June 30, 2016.
It is Mr Tsikata’s contention that the judge erred in law in pronouncing judgement when she had previously stated that she was awaiting the decision of the Supreme Court on the question of whether the International Finance Corporation (IFC) was amenable to the jurisdiction of the court of Ghana when the decision of the Supreme Court was to be pronounced on June 25, 2008.
“Trial judge showed manifest bias against the accused/appellant in the conduct of the trial and particularly, in proceeding to deliver judgement on the morning of June 18, 2008. The June 18 had not been set for judgement in the case and no notice had been served on the accused to that effect,” Mr Tsikata said.
He also maintained that the judge erred in law in closing the case for the defence, while there was the pending issue of a witness for the defence being subpoenaed to testify and that the judge erred in law.
He maintains that in proceeding with sentencing the appellant after the conviction simply on the basis that no appeal had been filed in the circumstance where counsel for the appellant was not present and the appellant clearly sought to remain on bail until an adjourned date.
Tsatsu Tsikata was sentenced to five years’ imprisonment on June 18, 2008, by the Accra Fast Track High Court for causing financial loss to the state through a loan that the GNPC guaranteed for Valley Farms, a private cocoa-growing company.
He was found guilty on three counts of wilfully causing financial loss of GH¢230,000 to the state and another count of misapplying public property.
His trial started in 2002 and travelled back and forth the court ladder until his sentence, which generated a lot of controversies.
Valley Farms contracted the loan from Caisse Francaise de Development in 1991 but defaulted in the payment and the GNPC, which acted as the guarantor, was compelled to pay it in 1996.
Mr Tsatsu Tsikata was unconditionally pardoned by former President J.A. Kufuor on his last day in office but he rejected the pardon and insisted that he would continue to pursue justice in the court of law.
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