Car dealer owes Ghana@50 Secretariat over one million
Ghana cedis
Accra, Sept. 3, Ghanadot/GNA - Fairllop
International Limited, dealers in luxury cars owes
government over one million Ghana cedis being the cost
of 35 Jaguar saloon cars it purchased from the Ghana@50
Secretariat after the 50th Independence anniversary
celebrations.
Incidentally, the company which sold the vehicles to the
Secretariat in 2007 for the celebrations opted to
purchase 35 out of the 40 vehicles it supplied based on
an advertisement by the secretariat offering to sell the
vehicles.
Mr Eric Agyemang, Managing Director of Fairllop,
testifying at the Ghana@50 Commission of Inquiry in
Accra on Thursday, said the company had not settled its
liability to government because Fairllop had encountered
“certain difficulties” since December last year, which
had mired the sale to offset the debt.
When a member of the Commission, Mrs Marrietta Brew
Appiah-Oppong asked about the nature of the difficulty
that prevented the sale, Mr Agyemang said the rumpus
that characterized the transition process after the 2008
Election made people apprehensive of buying the
vehicles.
He said apart from the transition process brouhaha,
Fairllop had also never dealt in second-hand vehicles
and was finding it extremely difficult to sell the cars
because those who had the money to purchase such luxury
cars preferred to buy brand new ones.
This drew a sharp rebuttal from Mrs Appiah-Oppong who
retorted “You cannot put your failure at the doorstep of
the transition process”.
“In any case the contractual agreement did not say you
should sell the cars before paying for them,” she said.
Mr Agyemang then said ”My Lord when we have buyers for
the vehicles we would pay or government should take the
vehicles back.”
Mr Justice Duose, Chairman of the Commission, asked
Fairllop to pay what it owed government or take steps to
negotiate on terms of settlement, which Mr Agyemang said
the company was doing.
Giving the background to the deal, Mr Agyemang said that
in 2006 the Secretariat at a meeting with car dealers,
asked Fairllop to submit a proposal for the supply of 40
Jaguar saloon cars for the Jubilee celebration.
Subsequently, Fairllop sent a Memorandum of
Understanding to the Secretariat stating interest in the
transaction, after which the Secretariat requested the
company to supply the vehicles.
He said the contractual agreement was that the
Secretariat was to make a 50 per cent down payment of
the cost of the vehicles and spread the remainder over a
period of 12 months, which the Secretariat observed
after taking custody of the vehicles and paid the
remainder in May 2008.
However, Mr Agyemang claimed that the Secretariat was
also indebted to the company to the tune of 93,684
dollars, explaining that the Secretariat made the
initial 50 per cent payment in dollars but subsequent
payments were made in Ghana cedis, which made Fairllop
register the shortfall as a result of exchange rate
differentials.
When Justice Duose asked Mr Agyemang to subtract what he
claimed the Secretariat owed from what Fairllop owed
government, he said his company after that deduction
would then be liable to pay government 908,000 dollars.
Mr Justice Duose asked why Fairllop had taken 35 out of
the 40 cars it supplied the Secretariat, to which Mr
Agyemang said the remaining five vehicles were involved
in accidents “and my Lord I would not touch such cars”.
Mr Paul Pepera, Managing Director of PHC Motors, who
also accounted for his company’s involvement with the
Secretariat, said that on April 11, 2006, PHC received a
letter from the Office of the President requesting them
to supply 35 Chrysler 300 saloon cars for the Jubilee
celebration.
He said that after an agreement was reached, PHC made
delivery of the cars to the Secretariat in January 2007
after an initial payment of 40 per cent of the price of
the vehicles was made in November 2006.
Mr Pepera said the Secretariat had paid the outstanding
balance on the contract to PHC.
When he was asked during cross examination whether PHC
went through the appropriate tendering process, he said
the company made a quotation to the Secretariat and won
the bid.
Officials from the African Union (AU) Development
Consortium Limited (AUDCL), the company that constructed
the Ridge Presidential houses, Chief Executive of the
Ghana@50 Secretariat, Dr Charles Wereko-Brobbey and the
Chairman of the National Planning Committee, Mr Kwadwo
Okyere Mpiani and their counsels were present at the
sitting.
GNA