Pressure group Occupy Ghana has described the recent Bureau of National Investigations (BNI) report on the BOST saga as “so deficient in several, material ways and leaves so many questions unanswered” hence calling for a re-probe into the allegations. The BNI after its investigations exonerated the Managing Director of the Bulk Oil Storage Distribution and Transportation (BOST) Alfred Obeng Boateng of any wrongdoing in the sale of some 5 million metric tonnes of contaminated fuel. The Energy Ministry endorsed the report by the BNI and said the eight (8) member committee set up to investigate events leading to the recent sale of the contaminated fuel would be coming out with recommendations to forestall future occurrences. In a statement released by the pressure group, Occupy Ghana it raised some 19 questions which need answering. Below is the full statement from the group: OCCUPYGHANA® SUPPORTS FORMATION OF MINISTERIAL COMMITTEE WITH AN EXPANDED MANDATE TO INVESTIGATE ALL SALES OF ALLEGEDLY CONTAMINATED PRODUCTS BY BOST OccupyGhana® has been observing with keen interest, the matters and issues arising from the sale of some fuels by the Bulk Oil Storage & Transportation Company Ltd. (BOST), a company owned by the Republic of Ghana. We were happy to wait for the results of the Ministerial Committee that was announced to investigate the matter, before making our comments public. That is why we want to place on record our objection to any person or institution trying to short-circuit, prejudge and prejudice the work of the Committee, even before it is formed. Our attention has been drawn to what purports to be a report by the Bureau of National Investigations (BNI). The alleged report apparently attempts to absolve some key and critical actors in the matter. Had the alleged BNI Report simply set out facts that had come to its knowledge in the course of its investigations, OccupyGhana® would have had no quarrel with it. But, it appears that the BNI went further than that when it began to express opinions as to who is or is not culpable in the matter. We are vehemently opposed to that. We insist that the work and the mandate of the Committee should continue, and that the alleged report at best be considered as one of the materials that the Committee may consider, and with liberty, based on evidence that it might recover, to agree or disagree with what is contained in the BNI Report. We say these because this BNI Report is so deficient in several, material ways and leaves so many questions unanswered that it is difficult to agree with several of its opinions and conclusions. Some of these questions are as follows:
- Who purchased and imported the product into Ghana, and from whom?
- How much was paid for it?
- Who was in charge of holding or storing the product until it was sold or otherwise disposed of?
- Under what circumstances and under whose control did the product become “contaminated”?
- Exactly how did the “contamination” happen?
- Exactly when did the “contamination” happen and/or when was it discovered?
- Was the product “contaminated” through negligence, criminal activity or any other illegal or wrongful act, and if so, who was responsible for it?
- Were there any remedial measures that could have been taken to “un-contaminate” or purify the product apart from selling it in the “contaminated” state, and if so were those measures feasible?
- Did BOST obtain the technical report that is a mandatory requirement for disposal of property under section 83(1) of the Public Procurement Act, 2003 (Act 663), and if so, who prepared that report and what did it say?
- Did BOST convene a Board of Survey to report on the product, and if so, did that Board recommend the best method of disposal of the product?
- Did the relevant BOST officer complete a Board of Survey Form, and if so, what did the Form say?
- Were the Board of Survey’s recommendations, if any, approved by the head of BOST, and if so, when?
- If the cause of the “contamination” was other than “wear and tear” (to the extent that this term may even be applicable to the product in question), what procedure was established by the Board of Survey for handling any losses, and to what extent was that procedure followed before the product was disposed of?
- Did the disposal of the product comply with the relevant portions of section 84 of Act 663, particularly by public tender to the highest bidder or by public auction, each being subject to reserve price?
- Which entities submitted bids or participated in the auction, and how much did each bid?
- Was due diligence conducted on those entities to, at the very least, ascertain (i) if they had been duly formed or incorporated, (ii) who were the human players behind those entities, and (iii) whether the entities are duly registered by the National Petroleum Authority to engage in that business?
- Was the Board of Directors of BOST involved in this transaction at all, and if so what do the relevant Board minutes say?
- If any of the provisions and procedures under Part VII of Act 663 were not followed, what steps are being taken to exact the civil and criminal sanctions prescribed by that Act for its breach?
- Has Ghana suffered any financial loss from this transaction, and if so, are there grounds to charge anyone with the offence of “causing financial loss”?