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Business News of Monday, 3 April 2017

    

Source: classfmonline.com

Ameri deal: Go to court! - Minority dares government

Dr. Kwabena Donkor, former Minister of Power play videoDr. Kwabena Donkor, former Minister of Power

The Minority in Parliament has dared the Akufo-Addo government to go to court to challenge the $510million Ameri power deal if, indeed, they can prove allegations of fraud allegedly detected by a 17-member committee set up by Energy Minister Boakye Agyarko to review the contract.

The Committee, chaired by Mr Philip Addison, a lawyer with another lawyer Vicky Bright as a member among 15 others revealed that the contract, which was an intervention to mitigate the power protracted crisis (dumsor) was overpriced by $150million.

The Minority Committee on Energy, however, told journalists at a press conference in parliament on Monday, 3 April that the Akufo-Addo government is just up to no good.

“If they read the contract again, they would know that establishing fraud is a basis for repudiating the contract, so, if they think that by the work of their committee they have established fraud, this is not the forum to vent their complaints, they should go to the court and say that because we have found fraud in the deal, we are asking the court to terminate the contract, they know they cannot do it, so what they are doing is a political agenda,” South Dayi MP Rockson-Nelson Dafiamekpor said.

“If you recall, they said that they are going to review all the power sector contracts, about 42 of them, and, so, this is the beginning and we are waiting for them,” he added.

Meanwhile, former Power Minister, Dr Kwabena Donkor, under whose tenure the deal was signed, told journalists that the Mahama administration negotiated one of the lowest tariffs for Ghana as far as emergency power deals are concerned.

“The normal thing in the energy sector is that emergency plants cost more, the tariffs in the emergency [deals] are higher, and, yet we were able to negotiate a tariff under emergency conditions that is lower than all other tariffs which were established under normal conditions.”