Waziri wa Fedha aliyefukuzwa kazi Ghana akiri kupokea Rushwa ya Tsh. Milioni 99.9 kutoka kwa mwekezaji

BARD AI

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Jul 24, 2018
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A now-sacked Ghanaian government minister has admitted that he accepted a cash gift of $40,000 (£33,000) "in order not to offend the sensibility of a potential wealthy investor", according to an official report into the incident.

Charles Adu Boahen was dismissed as a minister last November after an investigative journalist caught him on camera appearing to accept the money from someone pretending to be a wealthy sheikh who had expressed an interest in investing $500m in the continent including setting up an Islamic Bank in Ghana.

Ghana's Office of the Special Prosecutor (OSP), which looks into alleged corruption and corruption-related activities, launched a six-month investigation and released its report on Monday.

The secret filming by media company Tiger Eye PI also showed Mr Adu Boahen asking for "20% of the intended investment as his cut" and a fee of $200,000 for the vice-president," the OSP report says. The vice-president knew nothing of the arrangement.

In his conclusions, Special Prosecutor Kissi Agyabeng said Mr Adu Boahen "exhibited [a] lack of sound judgment. His claim that he accepted the cash gift to avoid offending the supposed sheikh lies very thinly."

In addition, Mr Agyabeng said the former minister was "quite reckless" in bringing up the vice-president.

Despite these conclusions the OSP said that while Mr Adu Boahen's actions amounted "to trading in influence or influence peddling" they are not criminal offences in Ghanaian law and as a result he cannot be prosecuted.
 
"to trading in influence
Examples of influence peddling can be using contacts in the government to obtain public contracts, obtaining a job in a company thanks to a personal relationship with someone influential in the company, or the granting of a permit or licence by an authority in exchange for a favour.
 
This is typical of the role finance ministers in African countries play; collecting funds on behalf of their presidents through fraudulent means to facilitate their elections and also build their own nests!
An African head of state knowingly or out of ignorance can go all the way when on a foreign trip to introduce their son/daughter to businessmen so that when they intend to invest in the said country they would be well advised to go through their siblings!! All this to facilitate high level corruption.
 
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