The Ministry of Roads and Highways has rubbished claims by NDC MP for Adaklu Governs Kwame Agbodza that the contract for the expansion of the Tema Motorway was awarded without parliament’s approval.

The Minority spokesperson on roads and transport called for the contract awarded to a Portuguese company to be abrogated and awarded to a Ghanaian contractor.

Mr Agbodza had said, “the top five contractors in this country can do a good job as Mota Ingil’s can do, but the Minister says ‘No they can’t,’ I feel very sad for the Minister…so we are calling on the government, this countract is illegitimate, Mota Ingil’s is touting this contract all over the world, trying to raise funds, this contract is not binding on the government.”

“The Minister must come back to Parliament or do open competitive bidding or consider yourself as someone who has breached the law and would catch up with you in the future.”

But in a press statement by the ministry, it said Mr Agbdodza’s comments are frivolous, groundless, and must be disregarded.

The release stated “the Ministry of Roads and Highways wishes to state without the slightest equivocation that the assertions and conclusions made by the Hon. Member are inaccurate and misleading.”

It went on “we wish to state that the Minister and Ministry have not in any way breached the requirement for Parliamentary approval for the Accra – Tema Motorway Extension Project and therefore the full content of the Hon. Member’s press conference should be totally disregarded and ignored by the good people of Ghana.”

Read the full statement below:

The Ministry for Roads and Highways signed a Commercial Contract with Mota-Engil in December 2020. This Commercial Contract as a standalone cannot be sent to Parliament without the complement of a Financial Agreement. As of now, the Financing arrangements are yet to be concluded. It is therefore premature for anybody to claim or suggest that we have breached the law, when the documents to be submitted to Parliament have not been finalized.

The signing of a Commercial Contract for internationally funded projects with conditions precedent before its submission to Parliament is not unusual. On the La Beach Road Completion Project, the Commercial Contract was signed in September 2012 with similar Conditions Precedent. The Cabinet and Parliamentary Approvals were secured in November and December 2018 respectively and the Contract became effective in 2019.

Again, on the Accra Intelligent Traffic Management Systems Project, the Commercial Contract was also signed in September 2012 with similar Conditions Precedent. The Cabinet and Parliamentary Approvals were secured in November and December 2018 respectively and the Contract became effective in 2019.

The Ministry of Roads and Highways is an active promoter of local content. Indeed, for the Accra Tema Motorway Extension Project, 40% of all works have been reserved for local contractors. However, we state for the avoidance of doubt that when the competitive bidding process was launched in December 2018, 23 companies expressed interest. None was Ghanaian.

It is therefore not accurate to give the impression that Ghanaian companies were excluded. It is simplistic and ignorant for anybody to do a simple calculation of cost over kilometers and conclude that the cost of the Accra Tema Motorway Extension Project is over-bloated without recourse to the actual scope and works involved in the Project. The scope of work of the project is as follows; 10 – lane 19.5km motorway (4 lanes of reinforced concrete freeway, 6 lanes of Urban Highway), Reconstruction of Tetteh Quarshie to Apenkwa (5.7 km), Remodeling of Tetteh Quarshie, Apenkwa and Achimota Interchanges, Construction of 5 new Interchanges (Lashibi, Abattoir, Teshie Link, Fiesta Royale and Neoplan junction), 14No. Pedestrian Footbridges, Toll Plazas and Streetlights. The Government through the Ministry of Roads and Highways is working in close collaboration with the Ministry of Finance and all other relevant stakeholders to ensure that no mandate is sidestepped and to obtain value for money in the interest of the nation.

The accusations leveled against the Ministry are frivolous, groundless and amounts to palpable falsehood.

The Ministry of Roads and Highways hereby informs the general public that the non-factual and misleading comments of Hon. Governs Kwame Agbodza should be disregarded. The Ministry of Roads has not breached the constitutional requirement for parliamentary approval for the Accra Tema Motorway Extension Project.

Parliamentary approval for international business transactions that have a funding component are only requested after the full compliments of the commercial and financial agreement have been signed. Both agreements are yet to be secured by the Ministry. The Ministry is therefore yet to reach a point where parliamentary approval is required.

Source: Ghana/Starrfm.com.gh/103.5FM