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Adu-Boahene accused of stealing GH¢49.1m explains how amount was disbursed

 A Former Direc­tor of the Nation­al Signals Bureau (NSB), Kwabena Adu-Boahene, has explained how the GH¢49.1 million he is be­ing accused of laundering, together with his wife, was disbursed.

In a letter from lawyers of Mr Adu-Boahene, attached to a memo addressed to the National Security Coordinator, he said the funds were used for various operational purposes.

These included payments made to Members of Parliament (MPs) as allowances, Special aide to President Elect, Elections Special Operations – Support for Opposition party, and various personnel.

Mr Adu-Boahene explained that the funds were related to transac­tions between two accounts, created by National Security, to meet urgent operational demands.

He said the Bureau of Na­tional Communications account functioned as a special operations account, while the BNC Communi­cations Bureau account, an account allegedly co-owned by him and his wife, served as a special-purpose vehicle to carry out sensitive trans­actions.

Among the expenditures listed were: GH¢9,537,000, paid to ISC Holdings as part payment for specialised cyber and electronic surveillance systems, GH¢6,900,000 disbursed to personnel and opera­tions supporting national stability and counter-terrorism efforts, and GH¢960,000 and GH¢309,000 provided as allowances to MPs on the Defence and Interior Commit­tee and the Subsidiary Legislation Committee, respectively, during the passage of the NSB Act and its associated Legislative Instrument.

Mr Adu-Boahene also men­tioned GH¢8.3 million reportedly allocated to an opposition party for procuring communications equipment to support election results collation and GH¢5,135,000 allegedly paid to the special aide of the President-elect for the purchase of high-end vehicles, including a Nissan Patrol Platinum, a 2024 Nissan Patrol Titanium, and a 2022 Land Cruiser GXR.

He said: “l cannot tell where the Attorney-General gets his theories from; but as your good office will have learned by now, the matter relates to transactions between your Special Services Account (Special Operations Account “Coordinated Account”) and SPV account “BNC Communications Bureau,” duly au­thorised and created for the nation­al security exigencies of the time and for which my wife (duly vetted) and the UMB were instrumental in facilitating.”

Mr Adu-Boahene described it as bizarre that the Attorney-General’s attempts to link unrelated transfers, withdrawals, and refunds for special operations with assets they do not own and a few they own which mostly predated the 2020 transac­tions.

“I am also disturbed to note that the services of bloggers and social media influencers have been employed to post and run com­mentary on these lies, to amplify the matter and bring prominence to this malicious agenda against not just our persons, but the National Security as well,” he emphasised.

Mr Adu-Boahene further indi­cated that some GH¢49 million of special operations funds have now become the subject of court action, where his wife and himself, as well as other affiliates, are being accused with charges, including stealing and causing financial loss to the state.

He assured the National Securi­ty Coordinator that they would nev­er steal public funds, as was being deliberately and wickedly portrayed by the Attorney-General.

Mr Adu-Boahene asked “In any case, how does one steal public funds in the manner being described by the Attorney-General without being fagged by the Audi­tor-General?”

He accused the Executive Director of Economic and Or­ganised Crime Office (EOCO) of deliberately misrepresenting or distorting the facts to the author­ities, and in the process causing unnecessary sensation that could embarrass the government and national security. —GNA

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