Man Makes Wrongful Claim Of Companies With Help Of AG

The Executive Secretary of the Divestiture Implementation Committee Secretariat, Asakkua Agambila, has been summoned by the Sole Commissioner, Justice Yaw Appau, to appear on Thursday August 7, 2014, to help unravel the mystery behind the Subin Timber Company located at Apowa in the Western Region. �This is a very serious matter, because this is an issue where somebody wants to take over something that does not belong to him. It appears he has been assisted by the Attorney General�s office, when the Attorney General did not do any due process to know the actual facts involved in this very case, so we will give you the opportunity to get the document that will assist the Commission to unravel the mystery.� He said this when Mr. Agambila appeared before the Judgment Debt Commission yesterday to submit documents in respect of a case titled: Subin Timber against the Attorney General�s Department, and some alleged fraudulent deals that resulted in an attempt to take over a company that does not belong a particular person. The companies were Subin Timber Company and Central Logging & Saw Mill, and a timber concession belonging to the late Kofi Ohene. He told the Commission that he was out of town when he received the subpoena to appear before the Commission within three days. He, therefore, pleaded to be given a few more days to make the documents available. In an overview, the Lead Counsel for the Commission, Dometi Kofi Sorpkor, said the properties, including Subin Timber Company and Central Logging and Saw Mill at Apowa in the Western Region, and a timber concession also located at Senkyire, around Fosu in the Central Region belonging to one Kofi Ohene, were allegedly confiscated by the state in 1982. According to him, the companies were a joint partnership between the late Kofi Ohene and one Italian national by name Ivo Fiorini, in which the former had 51% shares, and the remaining for the latter. Mr. Sorkpor said after the confiscation, one Daniel Kofi Adobor surfaced before the National Reconciliation (NRC) and claimed that the late Kofi Ohene was his father. He claimed that he was the adopted son of the owner of the companies. The purpose for his appearing before the NRC was to ask for the return of the confiscated properties to him, but that was not granted. The AG decided to compensate him, though to all intent and purposes he was not the owner of the said companies, and whose father was not the owner of the company, the AG decided to compensate him with GH�554,000. He added that Mr. Adobor rejected the amount. According Mr. Sorkpor, Mr. Adobor told the NRC that Mr. Fiorini had obtained a loan of 35 million Deutschmarks to purchase certain machinery for the enhancement of the said company, and, therefore, wanted the company back. The companies were later taken over completely by the state, and renamed Western Timbers, which came under government control. The AG was supposed to appear before the Commission yesterday, in respect of the same matter, because they, to some extent, assisted Daniel Kofi Adobor in his bid to take back the said companies. The AG is yet to appear before the Commission to uncover its role in respect of this matter.