Crime

UUT Bank worked with EDAIF before converted to Exim Bank – Witnesss

Mr Joseph Yeebo Sam­pana, the fifth prose­cution witness in the trial of Prince Kofi Amoabeng, Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the defunct UT Bank Ghana, and others, said UT Bank was in business with Export Development Agricultural and Investment Fund (EDAIF) before it was converted into Exim Bank.

He said the Fund started doing business with UT Bank when it was one of the Designated Finan­cial Institutions (DFI).

“Based on the approval of Bank of Ghana for Exim Bank to operate as a DFI, EDAIF started granting loans through UT Bank and when funds were placed with UT Bank, EDAIF was issued certificates of placement by UT Bank,” he told the High Court in Accra. Mr Sampana, who is also a treasurer with the Ghana Exim Bank, in his evidence in chief, filed the witness statement on June 24, 2020, and was admitted without objection from all the accused.

The five are Johnson Pandit Asiama, former Second Deputy Governor of Bank of Ghana (BoG), Raymond Amantu, Head of Banking Supervision Depart­ment (BSD) at BOG, UT Holdings Limited, which had shares in UT Bank Ghana, Catherine Johnson, Head of Treasury and Robert Kwesi Armah, General Manager of Corporate Banking, UT Bank.

They have been variously charged with 42 counts of willfully causing financial loss, abetment of crime, contravention of the Bank of Ghana Act, fraudulently causing financial loss to the Republic, fraudulent breach of trust, deceit of a public officer and fabrication of evidence.

They have, however, pleaded not guilty to the charges and were granted bail with various terms of condition.

Mr Sampana said when UT Bank was taken over by the GCB, the management of Exim Bank and GCB met and agreed to a pro­posal that GCB takes over all the investments Exim Bank had with the UT Bank.

He said three of Ghana Exim Bank’s investments with the UT Bank were consolidated by the GCB. Mr Sampana informed the court that Exim Bank found out that the said amount had

 been transferred to UT Holdings in the latter part of 2017 when Exim Bank was issued with a UT Holdings certificate of investment instead of a UT Bank certificate of investment.

During cross-examination by counsel for the 3rd accused (UT Holdings Limited (UT Holdings), the witness said UT Bank issued an investment certificate in respect of GH¢4,475,246.05, and informed the court that GH¢4,703,548.25 was invested on January 30, 2017, and was to mature on May 1, 2017.

Mr Sampana said the invest­ment of GH¢4,475,246.05 was rolled over on its maturity and Exim Bank realised that its invest­ments with UT Bank had been transferred to UT Holdings after GCB took over UT Bank. —GNA

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