Leaders of Parliament and MPs must stop attacking the person of UK High
Commissioner to Ghana Jon Benjamin vis-à-vis the recent leakage of a
confidential letter he wrote to Ghana’s parliament that cites three
sitting MPs and a former legislator as having been involved in various
visa infractions, editor-in-chief of the New Crusading newspaper
Abdul-Malik Kweku Baako has said.
“All the leaders of parliament
or leading MPs who are talking and attacking the High Commissioner are
just not doing the right thing,” Mr Baako said on Multi TV’s news analysis programme Newsfile on Saturday, 29 April.
He
said: “I’m clear in my mind that there were instances of
misrepresentation that informed the applications that some of them [the 4
MPs] placed before the High Commission.
“Somebody says this is
my wife, it turns out it’s not the wife; that’s a fact. You send a kid –
16-year-old – out, she is not back by a certain time. These are hard
facts.
“We should stop this thing of seeking to play on the
keyboards of people’s emotions by pointing to a foreigner. Did we do
what he [UK High Commissioner] said we did or we did not? When I say so I
mean the Ghanaians who are involved in it – they did.”
He
suggested that the Speaker of Parliament, Prof Mike Oquaye, send the
matter to the Privileges Committee or set up a special purpose committee
to investigate the matter.
“… I say this amounts to abuse of privilege and it brings the image of parliament into disrepute,” he asserted.
Below is the High Commissioner’s confidential letter to the Speaker of Ghana’s Parliament:
Dear Mr Speaker.
The
British High Commission (BHC) would like, in confidence, to bring the
following matters to your attention, regarding the apparent involvement
of three serving MPs and one former MP in visa fraud directly affecting
the United Kingdom.
In doing so, we note the powerful words in
your impressive inaugural address as Speaker, to the effect that, for
Members of Parliament, holding a Diplomatic Passport is both a privilege
and responsibility which should not be abused: and that those who
abused that trust would be appropriately dealt with.
In that regard:
1.
On 11/09/2012, the then Honourable and now former MP for Asunafo South,
George BOAKYE, applied for visas for himself and his 37-year-old
daughter, Joyce BOAKYE, to visit a friend in London for 17 days. The
visas were granted on 14/09/2012. On 17/01/2013, Joyce BOAKYE travelled
to the UK with her Honourable father. Joyce BOAKYE did not leave the UK
with her father, but remained until 06/01/2017. In other words, she
finally returned to Ghana just this month, having been in the UK
illegally for over three years, and only then at our strong urging of Mr
Boakye to bring her back. Mr Boakye is highly unlikely to be issued any
further visas to visit the UK in the next ten years for his role in
facilitating his daughter's travel to the UK, including should he be
re-elected to Parliament in a subsequent election.
2. On
27/11/2015 the Honourable MP for Bia East, Richard ACHEAMPONG, applied
for a UK visa using Diplomatic Passport number DX001490. The Hon
ACHEAMPONG stated in his application form that he would travel to the UK
for a two-week holiday with his “wife" Esther TIWAA. On 10/12/2015 Mr
ACHEAMPONG and Ms TIWAA were issued with UK visas. On 24/12/2015, Esther
TIWAA travelled to the UK, but alone: the Hon ACHEAMPONG did not
accompany her as both his and her visa applications said that he would.
She has not left the UK since that time, and is, therefore, now there
illegally. The Hon ACHEAMPONG did not declare the illegal presence of
his wife in the UK until he was challenged with the facts by us on
10/10/2016. He then repeatedly promised me personally that he would
bring documentation to prove that Esther TIWAA was, indeed, his wife,
but has consistently failed to do so, neither has he been prepared to
share any useful information to help us track down Ms TIWAA's current
whereabouts. Should Mr ACHEAMPONG now apply for another UK visa at any
point up until 08/12/2025 his previous actions with regard to Esther
TIWAA will weigh heavily against his application and he is likely to be
refused.
3. On 06/04/2016, the Honourable MP for Ntotroso, Joseph
Benhazin DAHAH applied for a UK visa using Diplomatic Passport number
DX001459 to go on a two-week holiday. The Hon DAHAH stated that he was
travelling with his wife Gloria DANSU and his niece Beatrice MENSAH. On
11/04/2016, the visas of the Hon DAHAH and Gloria DANSU were issued; the
visa of his niece Beatrice MENSAH was refused. On 13/05/2016, the Hon
DAHAH applied in another country for a visa to travel to the Republic of
Ireland with his wife and daughter. The identity of his wife had
changed from Gloria DANSU in the UK application to Ruyling APPAU in the
Irish one. More significantly, a birth certificate was submitted showing
that Beatrice MENSAH was now his daughter and not his niece as she had
been described when applying to visit the UK. The Hon DAHAH's UK visa
was cancelled and a 10-year UK visa ban has been imposed on him. He has
been informed of this.
4. On 20/06/2016, the Honourable MP for
Ahafo Ano South West, Johnson Kwaku ADU, applied for visas for himself,
his wife Grace YEBOAH and their 16-year old daughter Emmanuella ADU in
order to visit London for a ten-day holiday. The Hon ADU applied using
Diplomatic Passport number DX002267; all three visas were granted on
07/07/2016. The family of three travelled to the UK on 25/07/2016. The
Hon ADU left the UK just two days later on 27/07/2016 leaving behind his
wife and child, if that indeed is what they are, who have not left the
UK to date and are, therefore, now illegally resident there. This is in
some ways the most serious of the cases outlined in this letter, given
the possibility that Hon ADU knowingly facilitated the movement of a
minor – who cannot currently be traced – into the United Kingdom. That
has been noted with alarm by UK authorities.
The British High
Commission considers the actions outlined above to be completely
unacceptable. In some cases, these behaviours may arguably be criminal
in nature. As already outlined, administrative measures have been taken
to ensure that the Honourable members mentioned here will most likely
not be granted visas for the UK within the next 10 years. I should add
that the party affiliation of these MPs is, in this context, irrelevant
to us: we simply state the facts as we have discovered them. We are
continuing to investigate whether any other current or former MPs have
engaged in similar behaviour and will inform you, if we discover any
further such cases.
Furthermore, the British High Commission has
information that points strongly to some of the aforementioned
Honourable members having used the same unofficial visa agent (also
known as a ‘Goro boy’) in their applications, specifically a gentleman
called Appiah. We are sure that Mr Speaker shares our view that an
institution as respected and vitally important as the Ghanaian
parliament should not be a location where unregistered visa agents
approach Honourable Members and act as a conduit for them to participate
in visa fraud. The British High Commission will happily cooperate fully
with any parliamentary and law enforcement investigation into such
agents operating in the vicinity of the Ghanaian parliament.
Given what has transpired, the British High Commission would request the Ghanaian parliament to be aware of the following:
a)
we will, henceforth, only entertain and prioritise requests for visas
from MPs, if they are made through the parliamentary protocol office who
should verify that there is an official, parliamentary reason for the
proposed visit;
b) however, MPs wishing to make private visits to
the UK or to be accompanied on official visits by non-official
relatives must apply online and through our Visa Application Centre at
the Mövenpick Hotel like any other applicant;
c) could you kindly
confirm whether and why it is legitimate for ex-MPs to continue to
possess and use diplomatic passports, in some cases for many years after
they have ceased to be parliamentarians? In that regard, we would
humbly like to ask, Mr Speaker, what procedures are in place to ensure
that diplomatic passports are removed forthwith from all those 133
former Members who have just ceased to be MPs?
d) the net effect
of such visa fraud by a very few Honourable MPs as outlined in this
letter is to raise the bar of suspicion against all such applicants,
which is of course regrettably to the huge disadvantage of those very
many MPs who do act honourably at all times.
The British High
Commission looks forward to a constructive relationship with yourself,
your officers and the new Parliament in general and on specific issues,
such as the work currently being sponsored by the Westminster Foundation
for Democracy to bolster Parliament's research capacities. We hope, at
the same time, that measures taken by us all collectively will prevent
any repeat of the sort of cases described in this letter. We would
warmly welcome your views on the issues raised in this letter, both in
regards to the specific cases and generic issues.
I am copying
this letter to your Protocol Office, and to the Executive Secretary and
Chief-of-Staff to His Excellency President; and to the
Ministers-designate of Foreign Affairs and National Security. We are
also circulating this letter widely to other Diplomatic Missions which
issue visas in Ghana in the expectation that some of them will consider
similar action to ourselves against the above-named individuals.
May
I take this opportunity to repeat to you assurances of our very high
regard for you and your office; and to wish you, Mr Speaker, every
success in your new role. Please be assured of our commitment to
collaborate with you, and through you with Parliament, wherever we can
usefully be of assistance.
Signed,
Jon Benjamin
British High Commissioner
No comments:
Post a Comment