Former President of the Ghana Football Association (GFA), Mr Kwasi Nyantakyi, being prosecuted for alleged criminal roles in connection with the documentary by investigative Journalist, Anas Aremeyaw Anas, titled ‘#Number 12 Expose’ has been discharged by the Accra High Court on Thursday.
Abdulai Alhassan, the former Northern Regional Chairman of GFA, who was on trial together with Mr Nyantakyi was also discharged.
The two who made their first appearance in court on March 16, 2021, are now free from prosecution until any fresh charges are filed against them.
Justice Marie-Louise Simmons, presiding, discharged the accused for want of prosecution.
The case had been adjourned several times, as both the state and counsel for the accused, Mr Thaddeus Sory, challenged the decision of the High Court to have Anas Aremeyaw Anas, show his face to Mr Nyantakyi in the trial judge’s chamber, at the Court of Appeal.
In reaching the decision to discharge the two, Justice Simmons held that the court had for some years waited for prosecution to start the trial.
Mrs Simmons said the charge sheet was filed on March 16, 2021 while disclosures were filed on July 6, 2022 which was for five witnesses including Anas to testify.
She recounted that, the court had a ruling only on the mode of testimony by Anas on May 17, 2023 and an appeal was filed against the ruling by both parties.
Justice Simmons also indicated that the High Court had been “waiting patiently for the court of Appeal” while urging the prosecution to open its case using the other witnesses.
But that was not taken by the prosecution and the court to subsequently strike out the witness statements of those witnesses
The former GFA president, Nyantakyi, came under heavy criticism after the contents of Anas Aremeyaw Anas’s investigative piece titled ‘Number 12’ that were aired in Ghana on June 6, 2018.
The video captured Nyantakyi allegedly taking $65,000 (approximately £48,000) from an undercover reporter pretending to be a businessman.
The video, among other things, also captured top officials of the football association allegedly taking bribes to influence the invitation of players to the national team, to influence the duration of playing time offered to some players, and the selection of unfit players and referees to participate in games.
Number 12 also exposed more than 100 referees allegedly taking bribes to manipulate the outcomes of games in favour of certain teams.
Following the first screening of the video, which attracted more than 3,000 people, many called for the complete dissolution of the GFA and the immediate resignation of its embattled president, Kwesi Nyantakyi.
Nyantakyi, who was also the first vice president of the Confederation of African Football (CAF), eventually resigned from all football-related positions shortly after the video was aired. FIFA subsequently suspended Nyantakyi and later banned him for life.
The former GFA president was charged with fraud and corruption over his involvement in Anas’s investigative exposé, ‘Number 12.’
Mr Nyantakyi, who is also facing the charge of conspiracy to commit fraud with the former Northern Regional representative of the GFA, Abdulai Alhassan, has pleaded not guilty.
The two football administrators have been admitted to their previous bail sum of GH¢1 million each with three sureties, to be justified.
They are also required to report to the case investigator until its final determination.
BY MALIK SULLEMANA