Former New Patriotic Party (NPP) Member of Parliament (MP) for the Asikuma-Odoben-Brakwa Constituency, PC Appiah Ofori, has said President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo has abandoned him after he helped him win the 2016 presidential elections.
He said he has attempted to reach the president on phone on several occasions but the calls never went through.
The anti-corruption campaigner told TV3 on Monday, September 28 that he wrote to President Akufo-Addo and pleaded with him to make him a Board member of the Office of the Special Prosecutor (SP), however, the president did not respond to his letter.
The former MP shot to fame in the political arena in Ghana after he constantly leveled corruption allegations against the John Agyekum Kufuor administration after the NPP lost the 2008 elections.
In 2009, he revealed, in his testimony before an inter-ministerial committee tasked to review the Ghana Telecom sale, that all the NPP MPs who voted for the sale were each paid $5,000.
He said: ”I campaigned for Akufo-Addo and put him up from 2007 up to the time he became president in 2016. I am not happy about my abandonment. I am not happy about the way Akufo-Addo doesn’t know me again.
“Either he has blocked my line or changed his line. If I call him it doesn’t go [through]. I personally petitioned Akufo-Addo that I wanted to be sent to the Board of the [Office of] Special Prosecutor so that I will become the investigator but no response from him.
“I wrote the letter as soon as the Special Prosecutor was appointed. I just wanted to go there to investigate all these Auditor General’s reports. Some of the Auditor General’s reports are not comprehensive enough,” he said.
He further revealed that he regrets not serving in John Mahama’s administration after an offer was made to him to that effect.
“John Mahama himself called me and told me he wanted me to go and play a role in his administration and I told him that if he himself engages in corruption, I would not hesitate to expose him.
“He told me that was why he wanted me to come and be a check on him and his ministers but I didn’t take the position because if I should join National Democratic Congress administration, it will mean that I have abandoned NPP and I had abandoned Akufo-Addo. So I told him I won’t take the position but any corrupt practice that will take place in his administration which will come to my notice, I will draw his attention to it,” he said.
Asked whether he regrets not taking up that position, he said: “As a nation, as a country for the better of Ghana, I think if I had placed Ghana’s interest above party and got into that position, I think I would have been able to get all those engaged in corruption prosecuted. So for that, I have regretted.”