| | | Dr Sipa Yankey, Minister of Health, named in the bribery scandal. |
| | | A landmark ruling in the UK has named several Ghanaian politicians as having once received bribes from a British construction firm Mabey & Johnson in the 1980s and the 1990s.
The British construction firm was ordered to pay £5m after it pleaded guilty to involvement in overseas corruption and breaching UN sanctions.
Mabey & Johnson tried to influence officials in Jamaica and Ghana when bidding for public contracts.
It also paid more than $200,000 (£123,000) to Saddam Hussein's Iraq regime, violating the terms of the UN oil for food programme.
Mabey & Johnson confessed its wrongdoing to the UK Serious Fraud Office.
The Reading-based bridge builders secured contracts worth £60 million by bribing foreign politicians and other officials.
A judge at Southwark Crown Court in London, on Friday, fined the firm £3.5m. It was also ordered to pay a £1.1m confiscation order and £350,000 in prosecution costs.
In addition the company has made £1,413,611 available as reparations to Ghana, Jamaica and Iraq.
Following extensive discussions with the Serious Fraud Office, it pleaded guilty to two charges of conspiracy to corrupt and one charge of breaching UN sanctions on Iraq.
In Ghana
Kingpins of the National Democratic Congress (NDC) government including Dr Sipa Yankey, Mr Kwame Peprah and Dr Ato Quarshie were mentioned as having received bribes from the company.
Dr Ato Quarshie who is a former Works and Housing Minister is said to have taken a cheque for £55,000 in 1995, whilst Health Minister Dr Sipa Yankey reportedly received a total of £10,500, lawyers for Mabey & Johnson said in court.
Other persons including one Mohammed Seidu took £5,000; Edward Attipoe received £10,000; and Alhaji Sidique Boniface allegedly picked some £500 for school fees.
The company is said to have lobbied the government officials then through one Kwame Ofori whose influence had waned as at 1996.
The lobbyist was reportedly replaced by the then Treasurer of the ruling party with Baba Kamara, who was then thought to be very tactful and could influence tough persons such as Dr Obed Asamoah and Nana Konadu Agyemang Rawlings, both of whom held key positions.
However, the payouts “were not directly related to contracts and projects” executed by Mabey & Johnson.
The UK-based company is said to have executed three contracts, – totaling £26 million – two priority bridges and a bridge along a feeder road. The exact locations of the bridges were not mentioned.
The case is the first time a UK company has admitted in court that it was involved in overseas corruption and the breach of UN sanctions.
Friday’s hearing is be the first time the facts of the case have been heard in court, Christopher Hope of the Telegraph reported. |
| | | Source: BBC/peacefmonline with extracts from Myjoyonline | | | | | |
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