Crime

Invite U.S in Ghana Embassy in Washington corruption allegations – Barker-Vormawor

 A private legal prac­titioner, Mr Oliver Barker-Vormawor, is suggesting that Ghana must invite United States of America to investigate the alleged act of criminality in Ghana’s Embassy in Washington D.C since the offence was committed on its soil.

“The U.S. authorities must be officially notified and invited to investigate. The alleged scheme took place largely on U.S soil. The victims were mostly people engaging with a foreign mission accredited under U.S law. The fraud proceeds were likely laun­dered and used to acquire assets within the United States,”Mr Barker-Vormawor said in a post on his Facebook on Monday.

He said the scale of the fraud, its international dimensions, and the use of embassy resources to facilitate extortion of vulnerable applicants all make this a matter of serious diplomatic and crimi­nal concern.

Mr Barker-Vormawor stated that involving United States (U.S) authorities would allow Ghana to follow the money, freeze the asset, and extradite if necessary.

The lawyer also argued that the said offence was not just about an internal disciplinary or domestic prosecution issue, and that it squarely falls under U.S federal jurisdiction and may trigger the application of the Racketeer Influenced and Cor­rupt Organisations Act (RICO), a powerful legal instrument de­signed precisely for long-running, coordinated criminal enterprises.

Furthermore, he noted that the integrity of Ghana’s missions abroad—and the trust of its citi­zens and international partners—demands nothing less.

On Monday, Mr Ablakwa closed the embassy in Washing­ton D.C temporarily to allow for investigations into alleged corrupt practices carried out by a staff of the embassy.

Consequently, Mr Ablakwa had dismissed Mr Fred Kwarteng of the IT department of the embassy for allegedly creating an unauthorised link on the embas­sy’s website which diverted visa and passport applicants to his company, Ghana Travel Consul­tants (GTC), where he charged extra for multiple services on the blind side of the ministry and kept the entire proceeds in his private account.

Mr Kwarteng, a local staff, was recruited on August 11, 2017 to work in the embassy’s IT department.

“According to findings and his own admission, he created an un­authorised link on the embassy’s website which diverted visa and passport applicants to his com­pany, Ghana Travel Consultants (GTC), where he charged extra for multiple services on the blind side of the ministry and kept the entire proceeds in his private account,” Mr Ablakwa explained.

The Foreign Affairs Minister again indicated that the illegal extra charges were not approved by the ministry and parliament as required under the fees and charges act ranges from US$29.75 to US$60 per applicant.

Moreover, he said the in­vestigations revealed that Mr Kwarteng and his collaborators

 operated this illegal scheme for at least 5 years and that conduct has been reported to the Attor­ney-General for possible pros­ecution and retrieval of funds obtained through fraudulent schemes.

In the meantime, Mr Ablak­wa had taken swift action, in­cluding the immediate recall of all Ministry of Foreign Affairs staff posted to the Washington embassy.

Additionally, the embas­sy’s IT department has been promptly dissolved, and locally recruited staff at the embassy had been suspended.

Besides, the Auditor-Gener­al had been invited to conduct forensic examination of all transactions and to determine the total cost of this elaborate fraudulent scheme.

Mr Ablakwa urged visa ap­plicants to exercise restraint as steps are been taken to restruc­ture and overhaul the system.

He assured Ghanaians that President Mahama’s gov­ernment would continue to demonstrate zero tolerance for corruption, naked conflict of interest and blatant abuse of office.

 BY MALIK SULLEMANA

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