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@asktelecelgh_@TelecelGhana
Mo suban nnyɛ koraa. In this modern era, provision of good internet shouldn't be herculean.
Very soon, people will not treat your network as one to rely on in time of need.
I finally found this video after months of searching.
They've tried to keep this off of social media because it exposes all of the young people who died suddenly because of the jab.
A British company paid £1.2 million in bribes to senior Ghanaian officials to win £26 million in government contracts.
This happened during Ex President Jerry Rawlings administration.
That British company pleaded guilty in a UK court.
But guess what, not one of the Ghanaian officials who took the money has ever been charged in Ghana.
The company was Mabey & Johnson, a steel-bridge manufacturer based in Twyford, Berkshire.
They confessed at Southwark Crown Court in London on September 25, 2009. The judge was Geoffrey Rivlin QC. The lead prosecutor was John Hardy QC.
Mabey paid £470,000 directly into the personal accounts of the NDC government officials.
They then set up a separate £750,000 slush fund called the "Ghana Development Fund."
That fund was managed by three people: former First Lady Nana Konadu Agyeman-Rawlings, former Finance Minister Kwame Peprah, and Baba Kamara, who was the NDC's Deputy National Treasurer at the time.
The court named the recipients and the bank accounts in open session.
Former Roads Minister Dr. Ato Quarshie took £55,000.
Senior Finance Ministry lawyer Dr. George Sipa-Yankey took £15,000 wired into his Midland Bank account on Hill Street, London W1.
Former Deputy Roads Minister Amadu Seidu took £5,000 wired into his Woolwich account in St. Peter Port, Guernsey.
Inter-City STC Chairman Edward Lord-Attivor and a man named Edward Attipoe took £10,000 each.
A Finance Ministry desk officer named Saddique Boniface took payments that included money for school fees.
Mabey & Johnson did not absorb any of this. They simply inflated the contract prices and Ghana paid for its own corruption.
The British court fined Mabey & Johnson £6.6 million and ordered the company to pay Ghana £658,000 as reparation. The directors of the company were later sentenced to prison in 2011 for the same scandal.
In Ghana, nothing happened.
Sipa-Yankey was Mills' Health Minister in 2009 when his name was read out in London. He was traveling with the President in the United States when the news broke. He resigned to "clear his name." CHRAJ later cleared him.
Today, in May 2026, Dr. George Sipa-Yankey is the Board Chairman of Tema Shipyard and Drydock Limited, appointed by the current Mahama administration to lead the turnaround of one of Ghana's most strategic state assets.
A British court named him for taking foreign bribes.
Sixteen years later, the Ghanaian state put him in charge of a shipyard.