HomeBlogNews Papers Headline

Group petitions Special Prosecutor to probe ex-NPP MP’s bribery comments

Following the bribery statement made by the former Member of Parliament for Ejisu, Kwabena Owusu Aduomi, on national television a week ago, a grou

Dampare celebrates Farmers’ Day with cocoa farmers at Kwaafokrom
2021 Miss Western winner involves in fatal accident
MPs split heads as anti-LGBTQ+ bill to be laid in Parliament today for first reading

Following the bribery statement made by the former Member of Parliament for Ejisu, Kwabena Owusu Aduomi, on national television a week ago, a group, Ghana Watch Alliance, has petitioned the Office of the Special Prosecutor to investigate the matter.

According to the Alliance, the announcement made by the former lawmaker that he paid bribes in the past is a clear case of corruption and must be investigated.

“We believe that for a former minister of state to publicly sit on national television to voice out his personal bribery payments in the past with such high esteem cannot be overlooked in our quest to fight corruption in this country.”

In November 2021, the Special Prosecutor invited the Juaben Municipal Chief Executive nominee, Alex Sarfo-Kantanka, for questioning over corruption and corruption-related offenses after he publicly demanded a refund of monies paid as bribe to some assembly members to influence them to endorse his candidature.

The OSP had, however, called on members of the public who have knowledge of the commission of corruption or corruption-related offences to lodge complaints with the OSP against any official in that regard, a statement issued on Tuesday, January 25, said.

Ghana has been ranked 73rd out 180 countries in the 2021 Corruption Perceptions Index (CPI) released January 25, 2022 by Transparency International (TI) with a score of 43 out of a total of 100.

This CPI score indicates that Ghana failed to make progress in the fight against corruption in the year 2021 as the score of 43 is the same as the country’s 2020 score, Transparency International has said.

COMMENTS

WORDPRESS: 0
DISQUS: 0