Professor Ransford Gyampo wants to know if investigators checked Ken Ofori-Atta's medical story. The teacher asked this question during a Saturday TV show about the former Finance Minister. Government workers put Ofori-Atta on their wanted list after he missed important meetings. His family says he stays at Mayo Clinic fighting cancer. Gyampo thinks officials should visit the hospital and see if Ofori-Atta really lives there.
Another expert named Joshua Zaato believes security teams can solve this mystery quickly. He thinks state workers should go to America and find the truth about Ofori-Atta's location. These teams can also track his passport to see where he travels. Special Prosecutor Kissi Agyebeng declared Ofori-Atta wanted when he skipped his June meeting. The prosecutor said sick people still must answer questions about corruption charges.
Angela Ofori-Atta fights back against claims that her husband runs from responsibility. She told people that Ken always faces tough questions about his government work. The wife explained that cancer treatment forced their family to choose his health over legal meetings. Angela said Ken offered to talk through video calls or send answers through his lawyers. Government investigators rejected these ideas because they wanted face-to-face questioning.
Officials investigate Ken Ofori-Atta for five different money cases from his time serving President Akufo-Addo. These cases cover problems with government contracts and public spending decisions. Citizens across Ghana watch this battle between sick officials and corruption investigators. The case raises hard questions about fairness during serious illness.
Another expert named Joshua Zaato believes security teams can solve this mystery quickly. He thinks state workers should go to America and find the truth about Ofori-Atta's location. These teams can also track his passport to see where he travels. Special Prosecutor Kissi Agyebeng declared Ofori-Atta wanted when he skipped his June meeting. The prosecutor said sick people still must answer questions about corruption charges.
Angela Ofori-Atta fights back against claims that her husband runs from responsibility. She told people that Ken always faces tough questions about his government work. The wife explained that cancer treatment forced their family to choose his health over legal meetings. Angela said Ken offered to talk through video calls or send answers through his lawyers. Government investigators rejected these ideas because they wanted face-to-face questioning.
Officials investigate Ken Ofori-Atta for five different money cases from his time serving President Akufo-Addo. These cases cover problems with government contracts and public spending decisions. Citizens across Ghana watch this battle between sick officials and corruption investigators. The case raises hard questions about fairness during serious illness.