The Commission on Human Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ) has thrown out an alleged case of vote-buying and corruption against former President John Mahama.
The Commission was petitioned by Truth and Accountability Forum, a group affiliated to the governing New Patriotic Party.
The complainants claimed that ahead of the National Democratic Congress presidential primary last year, Mr Mahama presented some 40 vehicles to the party.
This act, according to the Forum, impacted the results of the election, which he won.
They also requested that the Commission investigates the source of the funding for the vehicles donated to the party.
But the Commission, in a 10-page report, dismissed the complainant’s petition, indicating that it was without merit.
At the end of its preliminary investigation into the allegations, the Commission came to the following findings of fact and conclusions:
a.) That the Respondent, HE former President John Dramani Mahama, is not a public officer;
b.) That the mandate of the Commission under Article 218 and Chapter 24 of the 1992 Constitution as well as s.7 (1) (a) and (c) of Act 456 deal specifically with public officers, and since the Commission has found as a fact that the position of a former President is not a public office, the anti-corruption investigative mandate of the Commission does not apply to the Respondent, a private citizen;
c.) And that the Commission finds as a fact that Respondent is not complicit in any ongoing corruption investigation by the Commission involving any public officer(s), adding that “investigation of corruption allegations against a public officer that implicates a private person makes that private person liable to the Commission’s corruption investigation mandate based on the Supreme Court’s interpretation of Article 218 of the 1992 Constitution in the Kamara case supra.”
CHRAJ’s decision ends an almost one year-long case first brought before it in June 2019.