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Ghana Must Avoid the ‘Oman Ghana’ Scam
Kofi Ellison
Commentary, Ghanadot - Americans have a saying
that there is a sucker born everyday. The statement
speaks to the gullibility of some people to fall for
schemes that are patently fraudulent, and should be
avoided the same way one would avoid the plague. There
is an ongoing attempt to scam the government and people
of Ghana unless sensible people rise up to say no to
con-men peddling falsehoods and lies. The damage will be
done not only in terms of huge monetary loss, but our
national prestige and international credibility will
forever be tarnished, if Ghana were to fall for a scam
currently being sold by remnants of John Ackah Blay
Miezah’s hustlers.
Of late, a group calling itself Friends of Oman Ghana
Trust Fund (FOGTF) has embarked on a media blitz aimed
at gaining the support of the government and people of
Ghana to what is essentially a scam akin to what the
villain in our folkore, Kwaku Ananse would endeavour to
visit on his family.
One cannot begin to understand this fraudulent scheme
without reference to the name and fraudulent practices
of the ‘master con-man’ Blay-Miezah. Indeed, FOGTF
claims to be continuing the efforts ‘made’ by
Blay-Miezah to gain access to some so-called money. The
mere mention of Blay-Miezah should have rang bells, and
alerted officials and the public to the scam, but so
far, like Blay-Miezah, the perpetrators are doing their
job in a fashion that sounds credible to the gullible.
According to Blay-Miezah, Ghana’s first president Dr.
Kwame Nkrumah named him the sole beneficiary of millions
of dollars that Nkrumah had stashed in banks in
Switzerland under a scheme described by Blay-Miezah as
the Oman Ghana Trust Fund (OGTF). After Nkrumah’s death
in 1972, Blay-Miezah managed to sell his OGTF story to
investors in the city of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania,
USA. Blay-Miezah had lived in the city, and had spent
time in a state prison for writing bad cheques, and
failing to settle a huge bill at the Bellevue Stratford
Hotel in Philadelphia.
After the con game was brought to the attention of
authorities, Time magazine (April 21, 1986 edition), did
a story on investors who had contributed at least $18
million (and possibly $100 million) to the scheme, and
quotes Robert Ellis extensively on the modalities of the
criminal enterprise. Robert Ellis had posted bond for
Blay-Miezah in a previous criminal case in Philadelphia,
and in return Blay-Miezah appointed Ellis, his American
‘agent’. The main role for Ellis was to solicit American
investors whose money would then be used to facilitate
retrieval of alleged millions of dollars bequeathed to
Blay-Miezah under the OGTF by the late president Nkrumah
of Ghana.
Blay-Miezah insisted that he needed cash in hand (which
he personally didn’t have!), in order to cut deals with
some local Chiefs and government officials, all of whom
had some stake in OGTF, and whose palms must be greased
in order to enable him to secure the funds. The story
being peddled in Ghana today by FOGTF, is rather similar
to the tale woven by Blay-Miezah to successfully ensnare
gullible investors in the 1970’s.
As Time magazine pointed out, those who fell prey to
Blay-Miezah were not some wacky illiterate individuals,
but highly intelligent and educated professionals. There
is a general belief among westerners that Africa’s
leaders especially in the immediate post-independence
era were corrupt. Therefore no matter how zany
Blay-Miezah’s story sounded, people found it hard to
discount. A corrupt African ruler had stolen millions
from his country’s treasury and stashed the money in
Swiss banks. The story had/has a familiar ring to it.
And con-men adopted the story to rake in millions from
the gullible and the greedy.
By the mid-1980’s when the gullible investors had not
received a penny on their contributions, and local law
enforcement authorities in Philadelphia had been alerted
to Blay-Miezah’s con-game, Blay-Miezah was happily
ensconced in a posh mansion in London where he was
safely protected under diplomatic immunity.
When Blay Miezah arrived in Ghana during General
Acheampong’s military regime (about 1975), he conned the
government into believing his story. Mr. Ebenezer M.
Debrah who had served as Ghana’s ambassador to the
United States, and was quite aware of Blay-Miezah’s
machinations, was the secretary to the military
government of the National Redemption Council. Reports
at the time indicated that Mr. Debrah provided a dossier
on the criminal activities of Blay-Miezah and strongly
warned the government to stay clear of the man.
However, Blay-Miezah’s story had made such an imprint on
the Ghanaian psyche, and the man laundered money so much
so that, Debrah was seen as an impediment to Ghana
receiving a windfall. Mr. Debrah was sacked as Secretary
to the government. Blay Miezah’s public relations
machine was quite effective, and it included stalwarts
in the Nkrumah regime such as the impressive Krobo
Edusei and Kwasi Amoako-Attah a former Minister of
Finance.
With his main antagonist out of the way, Blay-Miezah
successfully sold his story to the government and then
claimed that he could only retrieve the money if a
diplomatic passport was issued to him. In reality, his
acquisition of the diplomatic passport provided immunity
and cover from outside prosecution. Consequently, when a
criminal case pertaining to the fraud was brought
against him in the United States of America in the
1980’s, Blay-Miezah could not be extradited to
Philadelphia to face charges relating to financial
extortion and other crimes. Blay-Miezah’s diplomatic
passport would be renewed by the PNDC military
government which ruled Ghana from 1981-1992.
Thus, the late Ed Bradley had to go to London to
interview Blay-Miezah for the American CBS TV station’s
60 Minutes investigative report. I will never forget Ed
Bradley’s interview of Blay-Miezah. The day after the
interview, our American classmates who had seen the
program looked at me and the other African students in
awe. The Americans wondered how the African could come
up with such a well-crafted story to outwit these highly
educated, professional white Americans?
The master stroke however, was Blay-Miezah’s insistence
that the interview with 60 Minutes could not commence
unless Bradley provided the best gin for Blay-Miezah to
invoke the spirit of his ancestors, by purifying his
Stool, the symbol of his traditional authority, and the
embodiment of the souls of his ancestors! Bradley looked
on rather bemused as Blay-Miezah gargled a mouthful of
the liqour and then released powerful sprays 3-times
onto the ancestral Stool!
As one elderly Jewish woman who had invested his
lifetime savings in the OGTF, and who appeared on the
program wondered: How could Blay-Miezah not be rich, and
be the beneficiary of such huge largesse when he
accommodated the investors in posh most exclusive hotels
in London, Geneva, and Paris. Of course, Blay-Miezah
could afford exquisite entertainment for his investors
because he was using their money!! Blay-Miezah himself
did not have a dime to his name by himself. No wonder,
Ed Bradley said that of all the con men he had been
involved with, Blay-Miezah was "clearly head and
shoulders above the rest . . . the best con man I’ve
ever seen in my life."
The preceding provides more than a cautionary tale to
the government and people of Ghana as a latter-day
Blay-Miezah seeks to resurrect a discredited scam that
has spawned copy-cat scams all over the world.
When Blay-Miezah concocted his scheme and defrauded the
gullible and greedy investors of their hard-earned
money, the scheme was largely anonymous. Today, thanks
to the Internet and massive participation by Nigerian
fraudsters, the scheme is called 419, so-called after
the section of Nigeria’s legal code dealing with
financial scam. What the FOGTF is claiming is quite
similar to a 419. It is a sad commentary on the state of
affairs of the body politic when government officials
and the media cannot see through the ruse being
currently peddled by the so-called FOGTF.
Like Blay-Miezah before him, Gregg Frazier who is
currently presented as the ‘sole trustee’ of the Oman
Ghana Trust Fund, is reportedly demanding a Ghana
diplomatic passport to facilitate retrieval of the
money. Like Blay-Miezah before him, Frazier passes
himself off as having been anointed sole trustee of OGTF
after the death of Blay-Miezah; and Frazier similarly
claims to be the only living soul with knowledge of a
‘special security code and password’ needed to redeem
the money. Just as Blay Miezah had his American ‘agent’
to do his bidding in the U.S.A.; Frazier has his
Ghanaian local front man in the person of one Kobla
Asamani who is sometimes addressed as “His Awardship
Kobla Asamani” to smoothen his way among the Ghana
labyrinth! And like Blay-Miezah, Frazier seeks
government assistance in the scheme.
Kobla Asamani who signs press releases of the Friends of
Oman Ghana Trust Fund, warns that Frazier is advancing
in age, and the government of Ghana should therefore act
with alacrity to help Frazier secure the funds else
Frazier takes knowledge of the security code and
password to the grave! Blay-Miezah’s minions used to
give similar ominous warnings!
These two men and their so-called Friends of Oman Ghana
Trust Fund have embarked on a media show to press their
fraudulent case. They have managed to get Ghana’s
Finance Minister Baah Wiredu to signal interest and
support for the scheme, according to reports in the
Ghana news media currently saturated with news about
FOGTF and OGTF. Frazier and his group have managed to
meet with the Finance Minister in the latter’s office.
We must stop this nonsense before it is too late!!
Blay-Miezah similarly used the media to get his way. He
was feted by some of Ghana’s most accomplished
businessmen and industrialists, some of whom were too
eager to carry his luggage publicly; and offered him
sumptuous accommodations. The FOGTF is adopting similar
tactics to wine and dine some journalists to do FOGTF’s
bidding. I am sure there may be some gullible people in
positions of power and influence who may fall prey to
the machinations of FOGTF. After all, Gregg Frazier who
is an American, understands that there is a sucker born
everyday.
According to Gregg Frazier and FOGTF, Oman Ghana Trust
Fund now has money nearing THREE TRILLION DOLLARS! That
would be enough to rescue AIG and Lehman Brothers in the
ongoing banking crisis in the U.S.A.!! There is no Oman
Ghana Trust Fund. And there is no money anywhere in
spite of promises being made by Frazier. Blay Miezah
made similar promises, including one that if he did not
bring the money he could be shot. This promise came
after he was arrested and jailed by the PNDC government
of ex-president Rawlings.
Blay-Miezah conned people including Gregg Frazier (who
claims to have given millions to Blay-Miezah). Sadly,
FOGTF is now too late to a game where the most gullible
continue to be conned. If Frazier believes otherwise, I
am sure he would wish to buy my parcel of virgin forest
in the Louisiana swamps in the USA! As an American he
would understand the nature of my offer!!!
Rather than holding meetings to aid and abet this
forgery, I urge the government of Ghana to treat the
claims being made by the so-called FOGTF with utmost
contempt. The group must be warned in no uncertain terms
that continuing this calumny, and using Ghana’s name in
such fraudulent and despicable manner could invite
serious legal problems for the group and its members.
Kofi Ellison, Washington,
D.C, U.S.A, September 22, 2008
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