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Agyapa deal is clean;no cause for alarm - Ken Ofori-Atta

Finance Minister Ken Ofori-Atta has said the Agyapa Royalties deal is a clean and transparent one.
Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta
Finance Minister, Ken Ofori-Atta

Parliament, last Friday, August 21, 2020in line with the Minerals Income Investment Fund (MIIF) Act, 2018 (Act 978), approved agreements to allow the country to derive maximum value from its mineral resources and monetise the mineral income accruing to Ghana in a sustainable and responsible manner.

The move gives Agyapa Royalties Limited the right to secure about $1 billion to enable the government finance large infrastructural projects.

The Minority in Parliament boycotted the deal and accused the government of mortgaging Ghana’s gold resources.

Former President John Mahama, flagbearer of the biggest opposition party, the National Democratic Congress (NDC), also reiterated the Minority’s concerns and said he will not respect the deal should he win the December 7, 2020 polls.

A coalition of CSOs in the mining industry has also kicked against it.

But addressing a press conference in Accra on Thursday, August 27, 2020, Mr Ofori-Atta said: “… Agyapa is 100 per cent owned by MIIF, which is 100 per cent owned by the government and there are no hidden beneficiaries in that regard.”

“It is a clean transaction as far as I know and we’re just looking for ways to maximise value and to play in the game that our multinationals play and now we have the skillset to be able to do that,” he asserted.

“So, once begin the process of listing, all of us – and it’s going to be listed both in London and in Ghana and we’ve done that before with AngloGold Ashanti etc., so it’s not a mystery, in a sense, to do that,” Mr Ofori-Atta added.

He said the transaction, “as far as I know, has been as transparent as you can see it; it’s gone through Parliament on many levels, gone through Cabinet on many levels and there’s truly nothing to hide except creating something new that may be uncomfortable but it is something new that is going to stand us in great order.”

In the long run, Mr Ofori-Atta said he foresees Agyapa becoming a major player in Africa.

“I remember being on Wall Street and companies like Barrick starting and within an issue of a decade, becoming the third-largest company in the world. It is in the same ambition here and that this Agyapa is going to be the largest company in Africa, in the minerals resource place if we manage it right with the type of people that we are making sure are going to be custodians for this,” he noted.

He also denied that Ghana’s gold is being mortgaged.

“There are those who say we should be careful not to mortgage or sell today, the gold in the ground for future generations. First of all, this is not the case," Mr. Ofori-Atta noted.

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