The Sole Commissioner
of the Judgement Debt Commission, Mr Justice Yaw Apau, was stunned when a state
investigator informed the commission that the state did not know about the
confiscation of two timber companies, Holex Ghana Limited and Priorities Ghana
Limited. The owner of the two companies located at Akim Oda in the Eastern
Region, Nana Emmanuel Woode, who claimed that the state confiscated the
companies around 1982, sued the state in 2005. The failure of the
Attorney-General’s (A-G’s) Department to defend the case led to the payment of
GH¢3.47m (¢34.7 billion old cedis) to Nana Woode in 2006. However, the Chief
Investigation Officer in charge of Confiscated Assets at the Office of the
President, Mr John Kweku Mensah, told the commission at its sitting Tuesday
that the Confiscated Assets Committee (CAC) did not have any records on the
confiscation of the two companies. Mr Mensah, who indicated that he had worked
at the CAC since 1982, said “Holex has never been in our records. Priorities
has never been in our records.” “We have never had any of such properties
confiscated to the state”, he maintained. Mr Mensah also told the commission
that he had never heard of the name of the owner of the two companies, Nana
Woode. Counsel for the commission, Mr Dometi Kofi Sokpor said there was no
docket on the case of Holex Ghana Limited and Priorities Ghana Limited at the
Attorney General’s Department. Mr Sokpor said from the records, it was the
Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning which directed the Controller and
Accountant General’s Department (CAGD) to pay the GH¢3.47m compensation to Nana
Woode.
Source: Citi
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