Contracts for sale: Sacked PPA boss wired GH¢15.6m, USD4.46m, €54k into bank accounts – Amidu
Adjenim Boateng Adjei was sacked by President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo for allegations made against him in an exposé by ace journalist Manasseh Azure Awuni.
His dismissal follows adverse findings against him by the Commission on Human Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ).
The CHRAJ in a report stated: “The evidence also established a pattern of movement of large volumes of cash through the Respondent’s bank accounts between March 2017 and August 2019, far in excess of his known income (Stanbic Bank: USD Account – $516,225.00; Cedi Account – ¢3.83 million; Euro Account – EU54,500; UMB Bank: $110,000). The Respondent could not offer a satisfactory explanation as to the source of that huge volume of cash that passed through his bank account between March 2017 and August 2019 (unexplained wealth).
“The totality of the evidence showed that the Respondent had put himself in a position where his personal interest (financial and relational) conflicted with the performance of the functions of his office as CEO and Board Member of PPA.”
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It also stated that Adjei “put himself in several positions where his personal, relational, and pecuniary interest in TDL and other companies actually conflicted with the performance of the functions of his office as CEO and Board Member of PPA. The Commission holds that the Respondent has contravened article 284 of the 1992 Constitution.”
“The Respondent, being the CEO of PPA, the Regulator of the procurement sector, the Commission is of the strong and considered view that he has gravely abused his high office of trust, and the appropriateness and proportionality of any action to be taken by the Commission must be commensurate with the gravity of the abuse.”
CHRAJ noted further that: “the Respondent is unfit to hold public office and is therefore disqualified from holding any public office for a period of five years. Accordingly, it is hereby directed that no appointing authority of the State should engage or appoint the Respondent (Mr. Adjenim Boateng Adjei) into any public office howsoever described for the said five (5) year period beginning from the date of this decision.”
However, the Special Prosecutor, Martin Amidu was also tacked to probe the canker at the Authority.

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He said “The Commission for Human Rights and Administrative Justice (CHRAJ) ought to be commended for their report. The only problem with the CHRAJ report is that, for some reason, it understates the amounts disclosed by the bank statements from the three banks’ accounts of Mr. Adjei exhaustively reviewed by the Auditor-General for this Office.”
Read Martin Amidu’s full statement below:
AN UPDATE ON THE REFERRAL OF ALLEGATIONS OF CORRUPTION AGAINST THE CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER OF THE PUBLIC PROCUREMENT AUTHORITY BY THE PRESIDENCY TO THE OFFICE OF THE SPECIAL PROSECUTOR
The Secretary to the President, in a letter with reference number OSP127 VOL.3/19/1141 dated 22nd August 2019 referred allegations of corruption against the Chief Executive Officer (C. E. 0.) of the Public Procurement Authority to this Office for investigation.
At the time of this referral from the Presidency, the Special Prosecutor had already independently gathered intelligence on the matter of procurement malpractices by Mr. Adjenim Boateng Adjei, the C. E. 0. of the Public Procurement Authority and had also been provided with facts and materials from other sources, particularly from the Audit Service and the Registrar of Companies.
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I accordingly informed the Secretary to the President in this Office’s letter with reference number OSP/SCR/2c/5/19 dated 22nd August 2020 and stated, inter alia that: “…Consequently, when I read on Ghana Web on the night of 21st August 2019 a news report of Mr Manasseh Azure Awuni’s investigative work I called him up to congratulate him and to inform him that it was a matter the Auditor-General and I had been handling collaboratively for some time now. He told me he had also hinted the Auditor-General about his investigation.”
At the time of the referral by the Office of the President to this Office, this Office had also independently invited Mr Adjenim Boateng Adjei to report to this Office on 29th August 2019 to assist the on-going investigations.
I referred to the actual investigation of the procurement malpractices to the Acting Head of Investigations of this Office.
I froze the bank accounts of all the suspects together with their legal entities. This Office secured the bank statements of Mr Adjenim Boateng Adjei, his brother-in-law Mr Francis Arhin, and other suspects. The bank statements were made available to the Acting Head of Investigations for further action. I then sent a soft copy of the bank statements by way of referral to the Auditor-General who was collaborating with this Office in the investigation of the procurement malpractices for analysis to assist the investigation.