Dr Opuni, Seidu Agongo acquitte, discharged by Accra High Court
The former Chief Executive of Ghana COCOBOD, Dr Stephen Kwabena Opuni and Seidu Agongo, the Managing Director of Agricult Ghana Limited, have been acquitted and discharged by the Accra High Court.
This was after the Attorney-General and Minister of Justice filed a notice of withdrawal of 27 charges of willfully causing financial of GH¢271 million to the state in a fertiliser deal.
The decision of the court brings closure to the seven years trial of Dr Opuni and Mr Agongo.
A state Attorney, Enam Loh Mensah, represented the state, while Messrs Samuel Codjoe and Benson Nutsupkui were the counsel for Dr Opuni, Mr Agongo and Agricult Ghana Limited.
The two made their first appearance on March 26, 2018 and closed their case on March 30, 2021, three years after their appearance in court.
The case suffered a number of adjournments, as lawyers for the accused appealed some decisions of the trial high court at the Court of Appeal and the Supreme Court.
Counsel for the accused, accused the first trial judge, Justice Clemence Jackson Honyenugah, now a retired Supreme Court judge of bias and asked him to recuse himself.
After the judgement, Justice Aboagye Tandoh, the presiding judge, ordered the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) of the Ghana Police Service to release the passports of Dr Opuni and Mr Agongo.
The judge commended the lawyers for their tenacity and cooperation with the court.
He singled out Dr Opuni for praise saying that “I appreciate you commitment to come to court all the time. It demonstrates your believe in the rule of law and also your believe in your innocence. You have all been consistent and that has to be appreciated by those of us who believe in the rule of law,” Justice Tandoh.
Dr Opuni told journalists that he felt vindicated by the decision of the court.
In 2021, the Supreme Court (SC) in a 3-2 majority decision upheld the argument of Dr Opuni that there was a likelihood of bias against the applicant.
But in a review application filed by the Attorney-General (A-G) and Minister of Justice, Mr Godred Yeboah Dame, an enhanced panel of the SC, overturned the earlier decision by the same court.
Mr Samuel Codjoe had accused the judge of bias and asked him (judge) to recuse himself.
The first accusation against the judge was when Justice Honyenugah said at a traditional ceremony in the Volta Region in the build up to the 2020 General Election that President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo was likely to win the election because of his good works.
In another instance, Mr Codjoe accused the judge of bias when the judge asked for expeditious trial of the case.
The motions were a certiorari and a prohibition which seeks to quash an earlier ruling made by the high court and stop the judge from hearing the case.
Dr. Stephen Opuni presented 11 witnesses.
They included, farmers who applied lithovit foliar fertiliser on their cocoa farms, former and current senior technical and management staff of COCOBOD, and a board chairman, who participated in the certification, procurement, payment as well as field observation of the performance of lithovit fertiliser, a product the court heard was described by farmers as “messiah” and “saviour’ because it worked “magic” on their farms.
The Former COCOBOD Chief Executive, Dr Opuni, and Mr Agongo were also charged with money laundering and corruption by a public officer, in contravention of the Public Procurement Act in the purchase of Lithovit liquid fertiliser between 2014 and 2016.
It is the case of the prosecution, that the fertiliser was substandard and has accused Seidu Agongo, of allegedly using fraudulent means to sell the fertiliser to COCOBOD and further distribution to unsuspecting cocoa farmers.
The accused persons, have pleaded not guilty to the charges and are on a GH¢300,000.00 self-recognisance bail, each.
The COCOBOD trial had dragged on for seven years, Justice Clement Jackson Honyenugah, a retired Supreme Court Judge, was the first trial judge until he went on retirement.
The case docket was later assigned to Justice Gyimah Boadi, who at the outset decided to conduct fresh trial because of what he considered as “suspicions and allegations” from the parties concerned.
Justice Boadi was subsequently transferred and the case was assigned to Justice Tandoh.
Before then, the former Attorney-General and Minister of Justice, Godred Yeboah Dame, appealed the decision of Justice Boadi to conduct fresh trial and later in a ruling, a three-member panel of judges overturned the decision to start the trial afresh.
In March 2018, the Attorney-General charged Dr Opuni and Agongo with 27 counts for allegedly engaging in illegalities that caused financial loss of GH¢271.3 million to the state, and led to the distribution of substandard fertiliser to cocoa farmers.
Agongo is alleged to have used fraudulent means to sell substandard fertiliser to COCOBOD for onward distribution to cocoa farmers, while Dr Opuni is accused of facilitating the act by not allowing Agongo’s products to be tested and certified, as required by law.
BY MALIK SULLEMANA