Joseph Boahen Aidoo, Chief Executive of COCOBOD[/caption] Ghana Cocoa Board (COCOBOD) has been instructed to complete investigation into the missing documents and those tampered with in the custody of the Cocoa Research Institute of Ghana (CRIG) in two weeks. The Accra High Court that gave the directive on Monday, January 21, 2019 insisted that COCOBOD files the report of the committee in court on 5th February. The documents have been described as “germane” by defendants counsel in the trial of Dr. Stephen Opuni and Seidu Agongo. Dr Opuni, a former Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of COCOBOD, and Agongo, the CEO of Agricult Ghana Limited, are on trial for allegedly engaging in acts that incurred financial loss of GH¢271.3m in a series of fertiliser deals. What has been a major bone of contention since the case started is whether or not the Lithovit Foliar Fertiliser (LFF), which is the subject matter of the trial, was liquid or powdery in nature. Meanwhile, the documents, that have been a subject of interest to the court, include an invoice attached to the letter of 20th November 2014, an evaluation report on Codapec/Hitec products submitted to COCOBOD per CRIG letter CRG27/118/4643 dated 31st August 2016. The other is a report on the analysis of two granular fertiliser samples in a rice sack submitted to the Chief Executive on the 24th of October 2016 by a letter with reference number CRG39/14Vol22/5577. There is also another letter dated October 21, 2014. Deputy Director of Legal at COCOBOD, Mr Johannes Velba had told the High Court in December 17, 2018 that COCOBOD has set up a committee to investigate the circumstances surrounding the disappearance of the documents. Before the trial commenced on Monday at the court, counsel for second and third defendants Benson Nutsukpui and counsel for Dr. Opuni, the first defendant, Samuel Cudjoe requested for update on the committee’s report. Mr. Velba informed the court presided over by Mr. Justice Clemence Honyenuga, a justice of the Court of Appeal with additional responsibility as a High Court judge that the committee was yet to “finish its work”. “Even though they are about to complete their work, they have not been able to find the document and they are not able to unravel the circumstances leading to its disappearance; my lord we await the final report,” he said. When asked how soon he thinks the report would be ready, he said he believes it would be ready in two weeks’ time, noting that the committee is sitting in Tafo in the Eastern region where CRIG is based. Though the case proceeded with the cross-examination of the third prosecution witness, Dr Alfred Arthur, who is the Acting Head of the Soil Science Division of CRIG, lawyer Nutsukpui pointed out that since the committee’s report on the tampered document was not ready, it will be unfair to the court “if we close the cross examination without it”. The case was adjourned to February 6 with explicit instruction from Justice Clemence Honyenuga to Mr. Velba to ensure that the committee “speeds up” its work and complete investigation into the matter latest by February 4. The Cocoa Research Institute of Ghana was therefore directed to file the report before the court on February 5 before the next adjournment date.
PROCEEDINGS
Mr. Nutsukpui in the course of the cross-examination accused the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP), Mrs Yvonne Atakora Obuobisa of “interestingly” trying to “gag” a state witness from “answering questions on official documents”. [caption id="attachment_108697" align="alignleft" width="400"]