Suspended chairperson of the CHRAJ
says she would have accepted to live at
her official residence instead of renting
a hotel room for nearly three years, an
action that cost the state more than
$148,500.
“If I had known that government would
not release the funds to allow the
contractor to complete the renovations I
would have preferred for there to have
been no renovation at all”
Her confession was contained in a
report intercepted by Joy News
following a judicial probe into
allegations of abuse of office made
against her.
President John Mahama is yet to take
action on the suspended Commissioner
for Human Rights and Administrative
Justice (CHRAJ) 35 days after a report
was submitted to his office.
Lauretta Lamptey came under intense
public pressure in August 2014 following
revelations that she had allegedly
abused her office.
The President suspended Madam
Lauretta Lamptey in January this year
after a judicial probe set up by the Chief
Justice established a prima facie case
against her.
Details of the probe indicate Madam
Lamptey was grilled on her choices of
plane ticket, accommodation and her
moral commitment to fighting for the
disadvantaged in Ghana’s exploitative
rent industry.
Although a 2012 Auditor-General report
advised her to avoid “wasteful
spending’, it did not stop the suspended
human rights activist from upgrading
her air tickets to business class despite
the knowledge that the finances of the
commission did not favour such
spending.
She defended her travels to Network of
Afrian National Human Rights
Institutions programs saying the travels
had brought Ghana and CHRAJ
"immeasurable prestige".
But while she sought refuge in her work
as Chairperson of the NANHRI, other
African commissioners gave a damning
verdict on her work.
In an exhibit tendered during the
hearings, Lauretta Lamptey was
accused of "general dereliction of duty".
Her colleague commissioners chastised
her severely for improper conduct and
described her as a total disgrace.
"In our view you embarassed and let
down the network of African NHRIs. The
Network expected and deserved better
from you"
She was criticised for a "lack of
seriousness in the conduct of the
Network's business".
On her accommodation scandal,
Lauretta Lamptey also conceded that
her decision to stay at Best Western
Hotel was a misjudgement.
“On the Best Western Hotel, definitely I
would not have moved to a hotel if the
expectation was that I would stay out of
official residence for more than three
weeks”.
“The financial burden of my hotel stay
which I anticipated to be just a couple of
weeks has been almost unbearable”.
“This is particularly unfortunate since
the three months stay in the hotel did
not result in the contractor completing
the renovation”
She also confessed breaking the rent
law by paying for accommodation in
excess of six months.
“I must confess that I was not aware
that the limitation for rent advance was
six months. I was under the impression
that the legal limit was 2 years”.
Lauretta Lamptey cost the taxpayer
$148,500 in 33 months of rent at a
plush African Union (AU) Village
apartment where she stayed from
November 2011 to April 2014.
She approved of the rent because
renovation works on her official
bungalow had not been completed.
More than 180,000 cedis had already
been spent on the renovations.
The Communications Minister Omane
Boamah explained that all government
appointees or public servants are
entitled to a rent allowance not
exceeding 20% of their basic salary if
they are entitled to accommodation but
have not been allocated same by the
state.
It meant that it had to be established
whether Ms Lamptey’s nearly $5,000
monthly rent at the AU Village was
consistent with this rule.
The CHRAJ Commissioner must earn
something close to $25,000 a month
(GHS86,000), to be entitled to the
$4,500 monthly rent she paid. It looks
less likely she received that.
Public outrage followed the revelations.
Some expressed displeasure because
Ms. Lamptey could have gotten a less
expensive place to stay while her 10-
year old official residence located on the
Patrice Lumumba road, was being
renovated.
Legal practitioner, Egbert Faible said the
Commissioner’s conduct “leaves much
to be desired”.
He doubts if the Commissioner would be
able to pass judgment on a government
official brought to the Commission for
causing financial loss to the state.
Following the constitutional processes
to remove Ms Lamptey from office, Mr.
Nyamah of the Progressive Nationalists
Forum (PNF) petitioned President John
Dramani Mahama.
Article 146 (3) of the constitution states
that “If the President receives a petition
for the removal of Justice of a Superior
Court other than the Chief Justice or for
the removal of the Chairman of a
Regional Tribunal, he shall refer the
petition to the Chief Justice, who shall
determine whether there is a prima facie
case.”
The position of the CHRAJ
Commissioner is equal to a Court of
Appeal Judge.
The Chief Justice established a case of
abuse of office and set up a five-
member committee chaired by Justice
Anin-Yeboah to look into the matter
After over seven months of
investigation, the committee concluded
its investigation in September 2015 and
submitted its report to the Chief Justice
Georgina Theodora Wood.
Lauretta Lamptey has been on
suspension for nearly 10 months
UNDER MAINTENANCE