Bribery allegation: This is bad – Kpebu tells Appiah-Kubi on decision not to disclose identity of the businessman

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Martin Kpebu (Left) and Appiah-Kubi
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Private legal practitioner, Martin Kpebu, has told the Member of Parliament for Asante Akim North, Kwame Andy Appiah-Kubi, that his decision not to disclose the identity of the wealthy businessman whom he alleged to have attempted to bribe some lawmakers, is bad.

Kpebu said Appiah-Kubi’s decision is wrong and one that is not in the interest of the nation because he is concealing the identity of somebody who attempted to engage in illegality

“This is bad, we will not accept this from you,” Kpebu told Appiah-Kubi on the Key Points on TV3 on Saturday, January 6.

Mr Appiah-Kubi had said he made a promise not to disclose the identity of the businessman. He said his only interest in making the public statement about the attempted bribery was to send a clear message to the businessman and others that lawmakers could not be bought.

“I made a promise to him not to disclose his identity,” he said on the Key Points on TV3 on Saturday, January 6.

He further indicated that officials of the Office of the Special Prosecutor (OSP) who interrogated him on the bribery allegation were unethical in their approach.

He said the officials fought him and ordered him to listen to whatever they said or inquired from during the investigation in Parliament, an action he considered unethical.

“The OSP officials started fighting me so I decided to remain silent, they had already come to me with a hostile attitude even in the precincts of Parliament, and they asked the other MPs who came to leave.

“The OSP officials did not understand the ethics of the profession that you need to show courtesy to everyone who comes before you,” he added.

“This intimidatory approach and the disrespect to the other MPs who were asked to leave was not helpful,” he stressed.

He added “The OSP officials did not understand the ethics of the profession that you need to show courtesy to everyone who comes before you.

The  Special Prosecutor (SP) directed the closure of investigations into allegations that were made by Appiah-Kubi. The lawmaker had alleged that 80 Members of Parliament of the New Patriotic Party (NPP) received bribe from an unnamed businessman to back down on their demand for the resignation of Mr. Ken Ofori-Atta.

According to Mr Kissi Agyebeng, proceeding with investigations will not yield the desired results.

“…the Special Prosecutor directs the closure of the investigation
in respect of allegations that a well-known and wealthy businessman attempted
to bribe a section of the majority caucus of Parliament. The Special Prosecutor
determines that the institution of criminal proceedings, at this time, against the
OSP’s identified suspect would serve no useful purpose,” a report dated December 28 sighted by 3News.com indicated.

The SP stated that, “The investigation may be re-opened should the circumstances and further facts so dictate.”

“This report is founded on regulation 31(1)(g) of the Office of the Special
Prosecutor (Operations) Regulations, 2018 (L.I. 2374), which mandates the OSP
to publish detected acts of corruption through the receipt, collection, or collation
of reports, documents, materials, complaints, allegations, information and
intelligence,” he wrote.

It would be recalled that the MP for Asante Akim North, Andy Appiah-Kubi alleged that a wealthy businessman attempted to bribe he and 79 of his colleague NPP MPs for them to stop their quest to have Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta removed from office.