
A former investigator at the Office of the Special (OSP), Mr Mark Kwaku Asiedu-Arthur, has sued the OSP at the High Court in Accra, for alleged unlawful termination of appointment from the Office.
He joined the Office of the Attorney-General and Ministry of Justice to the suit as the first respondent.
The applicant said since he was appointed on July 31, 2023, he had carried out his work with diligence and in accordance with law.
Mr Asiedu-Arthur is asking the High Court (Human Rights) division to declare that the OSP’s withdrawal of his appointment letter dated July 31, 2023, without a hearing, and based on previously disclosed information is unfair, unreasonable, and in breach of Article 23 of the Constitution, 1992.
The applicant wants the court to hold the OSP’s action in withdrawing the applicant’s appointment letter dated July 31, 2023, without due process, amounts to a violation of his right to a fair hearing and right to administrative justice.
Mr Asiedu-Arthur again prayed the court to make an order directed at the OSP to make payment of compensation to the Applicant for the infringement of the Applicant’s fundamental human rights.
He is further seeking an order to be reinstated or in alternative payment of compensation in a lump sum.
Mr Asiedu-Arthur again wants the court to award cost occasioned by this action including legal fees per Ghana Bar Association (GBA) scale of fees, and any other orders as the court may deem fit.
In his statement of claim, the applicant stated that at the hearing of the matter, his counsel shall seek leave of the court to cross-examine Mr Kissi Agyebeng, the Special Prosecutor, Mr Emmanuel Basintale Amadu, the Director of Investigations Division, Office of the Special Prosecutor and Ms Boakyewaa Glover, the Director of Administration and Human Resource Management.
The facts according to the applicant are that he was employed by the OSP and was stationed at the Investigations
Division (ID) as an Investigator.
Moreover, Mr Asiedu-Arthur indicated that in or about 2023, he applied for employment at the Office of the Special Prosecutor (OSP), was shortlisted, and subsequently invited for an interview.
He said that in his application documents, particularly his Curriculum Vitae (CV), he disclosed that his appointment was previously terminated from a prior place of employment, namely the National Intelligence Bureau (NIB).
“That this prior termination of my appointment was fully discussed during the interview process and the interview panel expressed satisfaction with my explanation,” the applicant said.
He noted that despite the disclosure, he was duly offered employment by the OSP and was issued with an appointment letter dated July 31, 2023.
Mr Asiedu-Arthur stated that his appointment was subjected to a 12-month probation, which he duly served without incident or misconduct.
He said during his probation period, he was assigned to investigate matters relating to corruption and corruption-related offences involving the Scholarship Secretariat.
That, during the course of this investigation, several suspects were arrested, cautioned statements were taken from them, and numerous pieces of evidence were retrieved by my team.
That, the applicant emphasised that at a point in the investigation, his team was preparing to arrest Mr Kingsley Agyemang, the Chief Executive Officer of the Scholarship Secretariat, who is now the Member of Parliament for Akim Abuakwa South and a very close friend of the Special Prosecutor, Mr Agyebeng.
That owing to the imminence of the 2024 general election and the fact that Mr Kingsley Agyemang, of the Scholarship Secretariat was a parliamentary candidate for the Abuakwa South Constituency, the Special Prosecutor, in or around October 2024, directed that “the investigation involving the Scholarship Secretariat be discontinued so as not to prejudice his political ambitions.”
He mentioned that following the discontinuation of the said investigation, he began to face victimisation and undue pressure within the Office.
Mr Asiedu-Arthur said that he was interdicted and followed with withdrawal of his service.
This, he claims, were a gross violation of his rights, as the OSP failed to hear him.
BY MALIK SULLEMANA
The post OSP sued for unlawful termination of appointment appeared first on Ghanaian Times.
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