By Felix Engsalige
Nyaaba
The Supreme Court will
today give its verdict in the landmark case in which Mr. Samuel Okudzeto
Ablakwa and Dr. Edward Omane Boamah, are questioning among other things the
right of Mr. Jake Obetsebi Lamptey, a former Minister of state under the erstwhile
Kufour administration now national Chairman of the largest opposition party to purchase
state property, bungalow No. 2 at Mungo Street, Ridge
residential area, Accra.
The
case which has travelled for over three
years has finally reached its judgment day after the Supreme Court at the last
sitting on the case set today to deliver its ruling as to whether the purchased
of the bungalow by the former Minister of state was legal or otherwise.
The
ruling today by nine member panel of judges, expected to be led by Mr. Justice
William Atuguba, will also set as precedent for the country to know whether
ministers of state and other government appointees considered as custodians of
the state property could turn round and make the very state property their own
and denied the tax payer rights to the property.
The day which has been
set for the landmark case ruling has also coincidently happened to be the black
day for Ghanaians, as it happened to be the day many football supporters lost
their lives at the Accra Sport Stadium in a titanic match between Accra Hearts
of Oak and the Asante Kotoko.
Mr.
Obetsebi Lamptey was a Minister of
Information at the time of the incident in the erstwhile NPP government and
played a key role in the management of the disaster that became known as ‘Black
Wednesday’ and Mr. Okudzeto Ablakwa, a plaintiff in the case is also a Deputy Minister of
Information in the current government.
The case which was
filed in 2008 by the two plaintiffs who are now Deputy Ministers of Information
and Youth and Sports respectively reached an important stage and the judgment today
would determine whether the state property should be given to Mr. Obetsebi
Lamptey or be reversed to the people of Ghana.
The Supreme Court had
in December last year thrown out preliminary objection raised by Mr. Jake
Obetsebi Lamptey, contending that the Supreme Court do not have original
jurisdiction to hear the matter.
Mr. Obetsebi Lamprey,
who is also the Chairman of the NPP seeks to lay claim to the bungalow No. 2 at Mungo Street, Ridge residential area, arguing
that he has duly purchased it.
In his preliminary
objection, he had sought to argue that the two plaintiffs could have gone to
CHRAJ or the High Court with their case and that the Supreme Court did not have
jurisdiction in the matter.
He contended that,
Article 20 (5) of the 1992 constitution that the applicants sought for the
supreme court interpretation, was unambiguous as it sought to address
fundamental human rights and that the supreme court has no jurisdiction to hear
the matter.
But the nine eminent judges in a
unanimous decision last year held that constitutional matters have been raised
by the Plaintiffs and that Jake could not oust the jurisdiction of the Supreme
Court of Ghana to interpret the constitution in the matter.
Messrs Okudzeto Ablakwa and Omane Boamah, in the latter part
of 2008, sued the Attorney-General, the Chairman of the Lands Commission and
the Chief Registrar of Lands at the Lands Title Registry
in their personal capacities as citizens for allocating the property to Mr. Obetsebi-Lamptey.
In the writ invoking the original jurisdiction of the
Supreme Court, they are praying the court to declare that by virtue of articles
20(5), 23, 257, 258, 265, 284 and 296 of the 1992 Constitution, the Minister
for Water Resources, Works and Housing in the previous government did not have
the power to direct the sale, disposal or transfer of any government or public
land to Mr. Obetsebi-Lamptey or any other person or body under any
circumstances whatsoever.
The two deputy Ministers are also praying the court to order
that any such direction for the disposal, sale or outright transfer of the said
property in dispute or any other public land to Mr. Obetsebi-Lamptey was
illegal and unconstitutional.
They are further seeking a declaration that by virtue of
articles 20(5), 23, 257, 258, 265, 284 and 296 of the 1992 Constitution, the
government was obliged to retain and continue to use, in the public interest,
the property in dispute.
They are also seeking a further declaration that the
purported sale of the said government bungalow, located at St Mungo Street,
Ridge, Accra, by the previous government to Mr. Obetsebi-Lamptey was in utter
contravention of articles 20(5), 23, 257, 258, 265, 284 and 296 of the 1992
Constitution.
According to the applicants, the Supreme Court should order
that the purported direction by the then Minister for Water Resources, Works
and Housing for the disposal, sale or outright transfer of the said property in
dispute to Mr. Obetsebi-Lamptey smacked of cronyism, was arbitrary, capricious,
discriminatory and a gross abuse of the discretionary power vested in a public
officer under the 1992 Constitution.
The applicants are praying the court to declare that a
publication by the Chairman of the Lands Commission and the Chief Registrar of
Lands which announced that the said property had been allocated to Mr.
Obetsebi-Lamptey was unconstitutional, void and must be struck out as such,
since it was in contravention of articles 20(5), 23, 257, 258, 265, 284 and 296
of the 1992 Constitution.
Additionally, the applicants are praying for an order of
perpetual injunction to restrain the Chairman of the Lands Commission and the
Chief Registrar of Lands and their agents “from perfecting the registration of
a parcel of land designated as Parcel No 29, Block 12, Section 019, in extent
1.04 acres more or less, as delineated on Registry Map No 003/019/1998, on
which is situated Republic of Ghana Bungalow No 2, located at St Mungo Street,
Ridge, Accra, in the name of Hon Jake Obetsebi-Lamptey”.
A statement of case accompanying the writ said Mr. Obetsebi-Lamptey
allocated onto himself the government bungalow in dispute as his duty post and
resided at the said duty post at a huge cost to the state from 2001 to 2008,
although he resigned from his public office some time in 2007 to pursue his
presidential ambition.
It said in 2001, when Mr. Obetsebi-Lamptey was the Chief of
Staff at the Presidency, the head office of the Public Works Department and
later on a Minister of Information carried out, at his behest, renovation to
the tune of GH¢17,254 “through Brockwell Construction & Engineering
Limited, not to mention further additional refurbishment carried out at his
instance to his taste at extraordinary expense to that state”.
According to the statement of case, Mr. Obetsebi-Lamptey
subsequently applied to the Chairman of the Lands Commission and the Chief
Registrar of Lands for a land title certificate to effectuate what it termed
“the illegal and unconstitutional transaction”.
It said the Chairman of the Lands Commission and the Chief
Registrar of Lands took the above steps to regularize the grant to Mr.
Obetsebi-Lamptey a land certificate in relation to the said property to
effectuate the purported sale of the said government bungalow and plot to him.
According to the statement of case, the applicants wrote to
the then Attorney-General, protesting the sale of the said bungalow, but the
Attorney-General replied and pointed out that the matter was a constitutional
issue.
They further argued that the then Minister for Water
Resources, Works and Housing did not have the power to “direct the sale,
disposal or transfer of any government or public land to Mr. Obetsebi-Lamptey
or any person or body under such circumstances and that any such direction for
the disposal, sale or outright transfer of the said property in dispute or any
other public land to Mr. Obetsebi-Lamptey is illegal and unconstitutional”.
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