The Attorney-General and Minister of Justice, Ms Gloria Afua Akuffo, has recommended criminal investigations into the conduct of actors in the $200-million, 5,000-unit Saglemi housing project.
A letter, dated May 8, 2019, signed by Ms Akuffo and addressed to the Minister of Works and Housing, Mr Samuel Atta Akyea, indicated that the parties to the contract, namely, the government of Ghana and Construtora OAS Ghana Limited, were bound by the agreed accrued rights and obligations.
Following from the accrued rights and obligations of the parties, then Attorney-General advised that the Ministry of Works and Housing had the right to demand specific performance of the obligations of the contractor as contained in the original agreement.
The advice from the Attorney-General further stated that the original contract expired in June 2017 and for that reason “there can be no termination of a non-existent agreement as requested by the ministry”.
The Ministry of Works and Housing had requested the Attorney-General to advise on the options available for the termination or otherwise of the contract.
As a result, the Attorney-General said “the agreement, having expired in June 2017, the purported notice of termination by the contractor has no basis in law and is, therefore of no effect”.
“The ministry is, therefore, advised to write formally to the contractor rejecting the purported notice of termination,” the letter stated in response to the contractor’s notice of termination.
The Attorney-General, after reviewing the documents the Ministry of Works and Housing submitted to her outfit, observed that both the Executive and parliamentary approval for the Saglemi project was for 5,000 housing units for the cost of $200 million.