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Former Ghanaian special prosecutor Martin Amidu said their lives are threatened by people who want to kill them.
Amidu revealed for an interview inside, he says he knows the people who are behind the plans to remove him, but he’s not afraid.
Ghana’s President Nana Akufo-Addo, in reaction to Mr. Amidu’s complaints, directs the Inspector General of Police to provide 24-hour police protection to the former special prosecutor.
According to Ghana’s President’s Director of Communications Eugene Arhin, the government should encourage the former special counsel to assist the police and provide details of life-threatening individuals for investigation.
Despite attempts to inform the Minister of National Security, Albert Kan Dapaah has no end anywhere.
“I try to call Kan Dapaah, he didn’t choose him and I got a former national security adviser to contact him and tell him that, and I know the people involved, I can name them but I’m saving it for the meantime,” he said. reveal for inside interview more Accra-based Citinews.
“Dem wan rob me, burn my house … the intelligence is there … I give my life for Ghana and the president is going to be responsible for everything that happens to me,” he adds.
He explained that De Prez gets the mandate to ensure safety as a Ghanaian, so if something happens, I will have the Ghanaians put the problem on Prez Akufo-Addo’s door.
The former Special Prosecutor says die for the cause of the fight against corruption, don’t tell me.
Ghana’s anti-corruption crusader Amidu resigned as special prosecutor over claims that they say the government wants to interfere and work.
Mr Amidu, whom Prez Akufo-Addo appointed around January 2018, resigned for the sake of not being a poodle.
According to Amidu, “it is to inform the public and say that I am resigning from my position as special prosecutor.”
“As if I did not tell the public about my resignation … but the experience I went through after presenting my report on the agyapa agreement,” he says in the letter inside.
He explained that the reaction he received from the government for daring to investigate the Agyapa royalty agreement, and that they show that he cannot work independently as a Special Prosecutor.
Mr Amidu resigned a few weeks after presenting a report on the Agyapa royalty deal that the government promoted, in this report he explains that Ghana’s Finance Minister Ken Ofori Atta uses the South African company as a hedge to make money.