Monday,
January 6, 2014
So,
Parliament reconvened because of the NPP’s motion over the sale of Merchant
Bank?
Folks,
I have been monitoring this brouhaha over the sale of Merchant Bank but not
framed any prompt on it because it is one of those transactions that has more “dirty
politics” driving it than the real "economic" substance that should
determine it.
The
circumstances surrounding the deal may not really be clear to us, especially
considering the fact that too many cooks are involved in the cooking, which has
only ended up spoiling the broth. Too much partisan politics has taken over the
real issues involved to such an extent that entrenched positions have been
taken.
Opponents
have ganged up and made so much noise as to suggest that the deal was horrible.
The TUC initially supported the deal only to backtrack and indulge in negative
politics with it.
The
so-called Christian Council or community of clergymen have also jumped into the
fray, making so much noise to create the negative impression that will sustain
their kind of hidden anti-Mahama agenda.
As
for the legal action initiated by Andrew Awuni, it is not worth my bother
because it lacks substance—as the Financial Court confirmed. His intention to
appeal against that verdict is a mere exercise in futility. He has no locus
(not being a contributor to SSNIT). No genuine contributor to SSNIT has taken
the matter up either.
Allegations
that President Mahama influenced the deal to favour his brother (Ibrahim
Mahama) who was indebted to Merchant Bank can easily be dismissed as the
machinations of those who have chosen to loathe him for what he is---the
President of the country that they have desperately sought but could not get!!
Those
in the NPP loudly condemning the deal haven't told us why they are keen on
getting the South African Rand Bank to buy Merchant Bank. They won't because of
how they did things undercover in Kufuor's era, selling national assets (the
telecom industry and others, including the shady petroleum exploration
contracts favouring Kufuor's pals in Anadarko and E.O. Owusu/Kosmos). They have
their own skeletons to scare them. The hasty and criminal sale of the GNPC's
drillship is still being investigated.
Thus,
when we heard that Parliament was being reconvened to deliberate on an urgent
matter without our being told what that matter was, some of us suspected
something likely to verge on the sale of Merchant Bank.
And,
boy!! Have we not been proved right!!
Apparently,
the NPP Minority in Parliament had drafted a motion for Parliament to endorse
and cause an investigation to be done into the Merchant Bank transaction. Such
characters, pretending to be more patriotic than everybody else!!
But
their machinations have been shot down. The Speaker of Parliament, Edward Doe
Adjaho, has dismissed that motion filed by 80 Minority Members of Parliament
demanding an investigation into the controversial sale of Merchant Bank to
Equity fund, Fortiz (as reported by Myjoyonline.com).
I
doing so, the Speaker said Parliament cannot be seen to be prejudicing a case
that is currently before the courts. According to him two legs of the case are
already in court with a third being on appeal. He would rather the courts ruled
on the matters currently before them.
Led
by the Majority Leader, Benjamin Kunbuor, and the Deputy Attorney General
Dominic Ayine, MPs for Lawra and Bolga East respectively, the Majority side of
Parliament argued that any decision by the House to investigate the Fortiz deal
will amount to a usurpation of the powers of the Judiciary.
How
could these NPP MPs not have known that fact? And they claim to be lawyers too!!
But
the Minority, led by Osei Kyei Mensah-Bonsu and the former Attorney General
Paapa Owusu Ankomah argued that, Parliament as representatives of the people
had every right to investigate any matter that is of interest to the public.
The
minority members who are unhappy with the verdict are planning to hold a press
conference to make their opinions on the verdict known to the public.
MY COMMENTS
I may have my own misgivings about the manner in which this Merchant Bank deal is being done, but I won't be so naive as to point gossipping fingers at President Mahama and his government just to score cheap political points.
MY COMMENTS
I may have my own misgivings about the manner in which this Merchant Bank deal is being done, but I won't be so naive as to point gossipping fingers at President Mahama and his government just to score cheap political points.
That
is why all those blowing this deal out of all reasonable proportions should be
guided by precedent.
Is
it now that these NPP MPs know the value of investigation into the sale of
national assets? Where did they put their thinking caps at the time Kufuor was
disposing of Ghana Telecom and other viable state assets?
How
about the innumerable happenings all over the country that should have been
discussed by Parliament and appropriate measures taken to forestall the plain
thievery, murderous lying, and raw swindling of Ghanaians by all manner of
people? Have these NPP MPs any conscience left to know that a lot more
important issues demand urgent attention?
You
see, folks, for as long as this kind of politicking goes on, there is no way
our country can be developed. Those who are bent on playing/pandering to the
gallery are all over the place, doing things with careless abandon and creating
needless tension.
I
hope that those with a clean conscience will make their voices of reason
prevail.
I shall return…
·
E-mail:
mjbokor@yahoo.com
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