• Tsatsu Tsikata has once again given details on how he was wrongfully jailed
• Tsatsu was tried under the John Agyekum Kufuor administration on charges of willfully causing financial loss to the state
• He was surprisingly sentenced to jail for five years
Mr. Tsatsu Tsikata, a former Chief Executive Officer of the Ghana National Petroleum Corporation (GNPC), has once again offered explanations into the circumstances that led to his wrongful incarceration following a charge of financial loss to the state.
Among the things that happened during this incident which took place under the John Kufuor administration, the judge sitting on the case, Justice Henrietta Abban, caught Tsikata’s legal team by surprise when she suddenly delivered judgment, reports 3news.com.
Mr Tsikata is reported to have, in 1991, used the GNPC to guarantee a loan to a private cocoa-growing company, Valley Farms, which later defaulted in the payment.
GNPC, acting on behalf of the state, was compelled to pay the loan in 1996 following which he was hauled before court in 2002 on the charges of willfully causing financial loss to the state.
The report states that this happened after the Kufuor-led government of the New Patriotic Party (NPP) came into office in the year 2000.
And for six years, the case was heard in court until a point when a constitutional question became an issue during the trial and was pending determination by the Supreme Court.
On June 25, 2008, the court was to settle the matter but before the apex court could determine the case, the trial judge at the Accra Fast Track High Court, Justice Henrietta Abban moved to deliver judgment to the surprise of Tsatsu Tsikata.
The astute lawyer was sentenced to five years in jail in a trial that both the convicted and his party, the National Democratic Congress (NDC), described as smacking of political persecution.
A Court of Appeal in 2016 acquitted and discharged. Justice Dennis Adjei said there was a miscarriage of justice when an Accra Fast Track High Court on June 18, 2008, found him guilty on three counts of willfully causing financial loss of GH¢230,000 to the state and another count of misapplying public property.
Sharing his story in a recorded interview with TV3’s Alfred Ocansey which was aired on Friday June 18, Mr Tsikata who was the lead Counsel for former President John Dramani Mahama in the 2020 election petition hearing said “We thought based on what the judge herself had said for the last one and a half years, she was waiting for the Supreme Court to give their decision the following week. And so June 18, I go to court not imagining that any sort of judgement was going to be delivered.
“The judge had asked us to come early that day so we went at 8 O’ Clock earlier than usual. One of the first odd things that I noticed was that the Attorney General Joe Gartey at that time, had come with his full team and he had been in court for the last one and half years but suddenly that day he is there with a full team of five people. I thought perhaps, because we had been applying that what he said in the Supreme Court should be brought, so maybe he was coming to explain something about that. To cut a long story short, things turn in a different direction when the judge actually sat.”
Asked whether this trial was about the viability of the project itself, he said “Originally, the prosecution said they had issues with the viability of the project but then, when we went to the Supreme Court the Attorney General was saying they had no problem with the viability of the project. That was why we were insisting that the records of what the Attorney General had said in the Supreme Court should be now part of the records of the High Court proceedings together with whatever testimonies the IFC was going to be given. So we were not at the stage where judgement really should be expected.
“I did not act on my own as an individual or GNPC didn’t just act on its own as a corporate body. We had Merchant Bank not only as a financial advisor, at that time Jude Arthur was the Managing Director of merchant Bank, they were not only our financial advisor they were trustees of GNPC in respect of that project . So, Merchant Bank, and specifically Jude Arthur was actually representing GNPC’s interest on the Board of Valley Farms.
“In fact they introduced the project to us so in terms of viability we were insistence that the records of the IFC together with what the Attorney General had admitted in the Supreme Court would set to rest the matter of viability and that was never allowed”.
“Jude Arthur was the key prosecution witness against me and what was interesting was that his testimony was in many respect shown as false.
“Because we managed to get, under subpoena, records from Merchant Bank regarding how the Valley Farms project became part of their work in the first place because the impression has been created that I was the one that actually introduced Valley Farms to Merchant Bank. It was completely the opposite. It was rather Merchant Bank who introduced the project to us because at that time they were one of our bankers and as I said they also had a financial advisory role in placing our funds with various investment opportunities.”