play videoAbdul Malik Kweku Baako, Editor-in-Chief, New Crusading Guide Newspaper
Abdul Malik Kweku Baako, Editor-in-Chief of the New Crusading Guide Newspaper, says Prof Kwamana Ahwoi’s account that there was intense pressure on him to award a waste management contract to Eddie Annan, a known NDC financier and businessman said to be a confidante of the former president is true.
Baako explained that documents from the Serious Fraud Office (SFO) on September
Read full article.1, 2001, indicated that Nat Nunoo Amarteifio, a former mayor of Accra, told the SFO that Mr Annan put a good deal of pressure on him as the Metropolitan Chief Executive (MCE) of the Accra Metropolitan Assembly (AMA) to accept the terms and conditions of the proposal submit to his outfit.
Baako who was a panelist on Peace FM's Kokooko Morning Show Wednesday said that Mr Amarteifio told Eddie Annan or his representative that they (AMA) have some disagreement with his proposal so they cannot sign the contract as he wanted.
“They reported these to the former First Lady, Nana Konadu Agyeman-Rawlings. She occasionally invited me [Nat Nunoo Amarteifio] to her office to complain angrily of our alleged resistance to the golden opportunity to rid Accra of filth," Nat Nunoo Amarteifio told the SFO.
“As the negotiation dragged out, her complaints became more angry and personal rumors were spread that [there were] secret opposition members who were committed to sabotaging the government. Threats were made about our future employment, she adamantly refused to listen to our concerns about the financial viability about the project….”
Prof Kwamena Ahwoi on pages 136 and 137 of his book “Working with Rawlings”i, narrated that, during Rawlings’ second term in office as President, the Ministry of Local Government successfully negotiated a waste management contract between a company called City and Country Waste Limited and the Accra Metropolitan Assembly (AMA).
He explained that this was part of a deal the Ministry of Finance agreed to with the Accra Metropolitan Assembly (AMA) “which in turn contracted with City and Country Waste Limited for the importation of heavy-duty waste management equipment from Canada to be used for waste management in the Accra metropolis.”
Prof. Ahwoi explained that he was not happy with the structure of the contract between the AMA and the company.
“I was also concerned that we did not know of the track record of the Canadian company that was actually to execute the contract in terms of waste management. I formally wrote to the Attorney General for a legal opinion on the contract. I also constituted a five-person delegation led by my Deputy, Mrs. Cecilia Johnson to visit Abidjan and Dakar where we learnt the Canadian company was undertaking similar projects, and report on its performance,” Prof Ahwoi’s book said.
He also stated: “City and Country Waste Limited was a joint Ghanaian-Canadian venture owned partly by Mr. Eddie Annan, a known NDC financier and a close friend and confidante of President Rawlings and his wife.”
He added, “I was under intense pressure from President Rawlings who I suspect was himself under intense pressure from Mr. Eddie Annan, to authorise the MCE [Metropolitan Chief Executive] of Accra metropolis, Nat Nunoo Amarteifio, who was later replaced by Mr Ishmael Ayittey to sign the contract.
“When President Rawlings realised that I would not give the authorisation until I had finished with my consultations and checks, and seeing that this was going to result in considerable delay, he went behind me and directly ordered Mr Ishmael Ayittey to sign the contract," Prof Ahwoi recounted. "Mr Ayittey did.” He explained that this led to the cancellation of the contract when NPP came to power in 2001, and the subsequent sale of the equipment to private individuals.
“City and Country Waste Limited sued the AMA and in the case in which I gave evidence for the company, and which travelled all the way to the Supreme Court, City and Country Waste was awarded damages of about US$17million,” he added.
Prof. Ahwoi stated that AMA could not pay the damages, therefore, the court ordered the sale of its properties including the AMA head office and residence of its MCE.
“The NDC Government, which had returned to power at that time [of the judgement] in 2009, stepped in and got the judgement debt liquidated under arrangements with the District Assemblies Common Fund Administrator.”