The Law is Not for the Poor Alone: How Ghana Can Freeze Ken Ofori-Atta’s Global Wealth Right Now

A Defining Moment for Ghanaian Justice

For years, ordinary Ghanaians have been told to tighten their belts, pay higher taxes, and endure harsh economic times. Meanwhile, those who managed the country's money are accused of living in luxury. Right now, former Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta faces 78 counts of corruption-related offences brought by the Office of the Special Prosecutor (OSP). These serious charges involve the controversial SML revenue scandal and the National Cathedral project.

Yet, instead of standing in an Accra court to defend his name, Ken Ofori-Atta is far away in the United States. He has managed to secure a U.S. Green Card, using medical treatments and foreign immigration laws to stay out of the reach of Ghanaian judges. If a rich and powerful politician can simply board a plane, fly abroad, and keep his wealth safe while ordinary citizens suffer, then our laws mean nothing. Under the firm leadership of H.E. President John Dramani Mahama, Ghana must stop this delay. We must use a powerful legal weapon called a Worldwide Mareva Injunction to freeze his wealth everywhere in the world and prove that no one is above the law.

What is a "Worldwide Mareva Injunction" in Plain Language?

To the man on the street, legal terms can sound like confusing jargon. Here is exactly what Order 25 of Ghana’s High Court Rules (C.I. 47) means for the average citizen:

How this Relates to Ken Ofori-Atta’s Escape from Justice

The criminal trial in Accra is currently stuck in a mud of legal technicalities. This is why a global asset freeze is urgently needed:

Action Plan: Immediate Steps for President Mahama and Stakeholders

We cannot sit down and fold our arms while our national wealth sits unprotected in foreign countries. Here is what must happen immediately:

A Diplomatic Appeal to Leadership, Conscience, and Legacy

While the legal machinery of the state grinds through complex international channels, the pursuit of justice cannot rely on court orders alone. True leadership requires a moral compass that points toward accountability, even when the legal rules do not strictly demand it. To this end, a profound appeal is made to the conscience of the leadership of the New Patriotic Party (NPP), its National Communications Director Richard Ahiagbah, and former President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo.

The Law Must Work for Everyone

The legal stalemate surrounding Ken Ofori-Atta is a test for our entire nation. If a poor man steals a goat in a village, he is jailed within days. If a powerful politician is accused of mismanaging billions of state funds, he should not be allowed to live comfortably in America while our local courts stall.

Justice is sweetest when it is pursued with dignity. By rising above partisan defense mechanisms and appealing to the conscience of the accused, the leadership that appointed and supported him can help heal the national psyche. They can demonstrate that in Ghana, the defense of the public purse is a shared moral duty that transcends party lines.

As President John Dramani Mahama drives his national agenda to reset Ghana's broken institutions, the state must act with speed and smart legal strategies. By using the Worldwide Mareva Injunction under Order 25 of C.I. 47, we can bypass the international red tape. We will freeze the wealth where it sits, protect the Ghanaian taxpayer, and send a clear message to all public officials: you can run, but your wealth cannot hide from the scales of Ghanaian justice.

✍️ 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

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