A Nation Betrayed: Why Ken Ofori-Atta’s Escape is an Absolute Insult to the Suffering Youth of Ghana

A Direct Attack on Our Dignity
The recent announcement that a United States immigration court has granted a Green Card to Ghana's former Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta, is nothing short of an absolute insult to millions of ordinary citizens. For the everyday Ghanaian—especially the youth who have watched their life savings evaporate under the catastrophic Domestic Debt Exchange Programme (DDEP) and their job prospects vanish into thin air—this development is a painful slap in the face. To the suffering masses, it looks like a textbook case of elite impunity: a powerful Western nation providing a safe permanent haven to a public official while Ghanaian youth are left to inherit a bleak future of hyperinflation, joblessness, and economic trauma.

But public anger must be channeled into legal literacy and aggressive civic action. An American Green Card is a civil immigration status; it is not an immunity shield from criminal prosecution. The Office of the Special Prosecutor (OSP) has slapped Ken Ofori-Atta with 78 counts of corruption and procurement breaches. The sovereign state of Ghana retains absolute jurisdiction over crimes committed on its soil. If our judicial system is to prove that the law is no respecter of persons, our state institutions must stop treating this elite suspect with kid gloves. The future, dignity, and human rights of the Ghanaian youth depend entirely on breaking this cycle of selective justice.

The Ghost of Christmas Past: Remembering Victor Selormey

To understand why the current legal stalemate is so deeply unfair, we must look back at Ghana's own judicial history. The contrast between how the state treats different political actors is staggering, exposing a blatant double standard that cannot be ignored.

The Reality on the Ground: The Stalled Accra High Court Trial

While public attention is fixed on the drama in America, the actual trial inside the Criminal Division of the High Court in Accra reveals a massive structural failure that plays right into the hands of the defense.

The SML Forensic Findings: The Billions Stolen From the Youth

The 78-count indictment is not built on political rhetoric; it is anchored in a damning forensic audit of the SML revenue assurance contract. The findings detail exactly how the nation's financial capsule was drained:

Technical Analysis: Breaking the U.S.-Ghana Extradition Treaty

To bring Ofori-Atta back, the Attorney General and the OSP must navigate the strict legal clauses of the U.S.-Ghana Extradition Treaty. It requires immediate, technical action:

Recommendations for Action: A Direct Charge to Ghana's Youth and Civil Society

Economic corruption is not a victimless, white-collar crime—it is a direct violation of your human rights. Every cedi diverted to an inflated contract is a youth job destroyed, a hospital left unbuilt, and a student loan scheme defunded. The youth can no longer sit silently; it is time to deploy relentless pressure:

The Youth Must Inherit a Nation, Not an Empty Tomb

The Ken Ofori-Atta case is a defining moment for Ghana's democracy. If an elite official can use administrative delays, foreign medical care, and civil immigration tools to stall a 78-count corruption trial, then our constitutional claim that "all persons are equal before the law" is a complete illusion.

The youth of Ghana cannot afford to sit on the fence and watch their futures traded away. You deserve dignity, jobs, stable public infrastructure, and a secure homeland. True justice for Ghana requires our state prosecutors to match the legal precision of international treaties, and it requires our youth to relentlessly demand that those who held the keys to the public purse account for every single pesewa. It is time to end the era of selective justice—bring the trial home, serve the charges, and let the law take its course.

Understanding Letters Rogatory and the International Service Procedure

When a criminal defendant is physically located in a foreign country like the United States, a local court in Accra cannot simply mail a charge sheet or send a local police officer to deliver it. Doing so would violate the state sovereignty of the host nation. To overcome this, international law provides a formal judicial mechanism known as Letters Rogatory.

What is a Letter Rogatory?

A Letter Rogatory (also known as a Letter of Request) is a formal written request from a court in one country (the requesting state, Ghana) to a court in a foreign country (the receiving state, the United States). It effectively says: "We are a sovereign court handling a criminal matter, and we respectfully ask your judiciary to assist us by performing a specific legal act within your borders that we do not have the power to do ourselves."

In the case of Ken Ofori-Atta, Ghana requires the U.S. judiciary to formally serve the 78-count indictment and court summons directly into his hands or to his legal representatives, satisfying the strict requirements of Article 19(3) of the Ghanaian Constitution.

The Step-by-Step Procedure for Service of Charges

For the Office of the Special Prosecutor (OSP) and the Attorney General to successfully execute this process, the paperwork must crawl through a highly regulated bureaucratic and diplomatic pipeline:

The OSP must draft the Letters Rogatory packet. This includes the 78-count indictment, the facts of the case, and a formal request for service. A judge of the Accra High Court must review and officially sign off on the document, stamping it with the seal of the Republic of Ghana.

  • Step 2: The Diplomatic Channel (The Ministry Route)

    The signed document is sent from the High Court to Ghana's Ministry of Justice and Attorney General's Department. From there, it is forwarded to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration, which transmits it directly to the Ghanaian Embassy in Washington, D.C.

  • Step 3: Transmission to the U.S. Government

    The Ghanaian Embassy delivers the packet to the U.S. Department of State via a formal diplomatic note. Because it involves a criminal case, the State Department routes the request to the Office of International Affairs (OIA) within the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ).

  • Step 4: U.S. Judicial Review and Execution

    The U.S. DOJ reviews the request to ensure it does not violate American laws or national security. Once approved, a U.S. federal prosecutor presents the letter to a federal district judge in the jurisdiction where Ken Ofori-Atta resides. The American judge then issues an order authorizing a U.S. Marshal or a designated process server to execute the service.

  • Step 5: Handing Over the Charges and Return of Service

  • The U.S. Marshal physically delivers the Ghanaian court documents to Ofori-Atta or his authorized legal counsel. Once delivered, the server signs an official "Proof of Service." This proof travels back up the same diplomatic chain to the Accra High Court.

    Why is this Step Absolutely Fatal if Ignored?

    ✍️By A Concerned Retired Senior Citizen

    For and on behalf of all Senior Citizens of the Republic of Ghana 🇬🇭

    Teshie-Nungua
    akpaluck@gmail.com

    A Voice for Accountability and Reform in Governance

    Disclaimer: "The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect ModernGhana official position. ModernGhana will not be responsible or liable for any inaccurate or incorrect statements in the contributions or columns here."

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