Ford Expedition |
Apart from the GII which has spoken against the acceptance of the gift by the president, a prominent member of policy think tank IMANI Ghana and pressure group OccupyGhana, Mr Kofi Bentil, has expressed shock at the revelation.
The government has issued a statement denying that the gift influenced the President in any way. A statement signed by the Minister of Communications, Dr Edward Omane Boamah, noted: “The said vehicle, which was placed in the vehicle pool at the presidency as per established convention, had nothing to do with the award of the contracts.”
However, Mr Bentil, in a post on Facebook wondered: “Must THE OFFICE OF THE PRESIDENT be accepting gifts from Contractors? I am so ashamed to hear people say the vehicle was put in the pool so it’s not a problem...,” adding: “This thinking is appalling to say the least and reveals the dearth of knowledge of the people in power about fighting corruption!” “So don't they know that this is an absolute no no?
And Mr. [Daniel] Batidam [The President’s Advisor on Governance and Corruption] goes to work every day? What does he do?” Mr Bentil asked. He said: “If our presidency is this open to contractors, then our nation is for sale to the highest bidder because Ghana doesn't have a proper process for managing gifts to the President. So, anything goes! If we want to accept gifts at the presidency, let’s develop a proper procedure (like they have in the US) for that. So that it’s clear to everyone.”
Meanwhile, the Ranking Member of Parliament’s Constitutional, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs Joe Osei-Owusu, Joe Osei-Wusu has described the president’s acceptance of the car fight as a “shameful” and “corrupt” act, which is impeachable.
According to the MP, "The man [contractor] is getting favours as a result of the kickbacks he has paid to the president. We should keep telling Ghanaians that the president is corrupt and taking bribes for petty things like this,” He said the president has allowed himself to be bribed. “There is no such thing as a gift in this circumstance”.
According to him, Mr Mahama “should not have even encouraged that kind of relationship such that the person will deliver a vehicle intended for you in Burkina Faso and then it will be driven through the borders with official letters requiring that the vehicle be allowed because it is a gift…I mean it is shameful. Was the gift intended for the state? And it was received by him, not the state. It is not registered in the name of the state, I guess,” the legislator said.
In the Bekwai MP’s estimation, the whole issue was swept under the carpet and the government would have been silent about it had it not been for the revelation by the media. He felt the press statement issued by the Communications Minister was an “afterthought trying to explain the serious graft that is going on in the government”.
“How many vehicles are in the presidential pool and how many vehicles can he [Mr Mahama] not have? Does he need this gift? Does the state need this gift from a contractor? Why did he not reduce the cost of the project [as well]?” the lawmaker questioned. The whole issue, he said, “calls for a look at the contract figures again and the cost of the supervision of the work [by the contractor].
For me, this is only the tail end of the story. The whole process, procedure, tendering, following through a big man is a process of bribing the president for something that the connection has given to him.” “Some decisions are not personal whether to impeach the president or not. Whether it is right, legal or politically wise is another matter.”
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