• Our Impact
  • Whistleblower
  • Fact-Check Ghana
Donate
The Fourth Estate
  • Home
  • General News
  • Anti-Corruption
  • Environment
  • Human Rights
  • Opinions
FourthEstate FourthEstate
  • Our Impact
  • Whistleblower
  • Fact-Check Ghana
Search
  • Home
  • General News
  • Anti-Corruption
  • Environment
  • Human Rights
  • Opinions
© 2024 | The Fourth Estate
Anti-Corruption

More trouble for former NSA Boss Osei Assibey as prosecution amends charge sheet to 21 counts

By Philip Teye Agbove Date: March 9, 2026
Osei Assibey Antwi is a former Director of the National Service Authority
SHARE

State prosecutors on Monday revised the charge sheet in the criminal trial of former National Service Authority (NSA) Executive Director, Osei Assibey Antwi, increasing the number of charges against him from 14 to 21.

The new charges include multiple counts of money laundering, stealing and improper payment of public funds, all linked to alleged financial improprieties prosecutors say caused significant loss to the state.

Mr Assibey pleaded not guilty to all 21 counts when the charges were read to him in court.

Bail plea

Lead defence counsel for Mr Assibey, Ralph Poku-Adusei, appealed to the court to maintain favourable bail conditions for his client, arguing that Mr Assibey had cooperated fully with investigators since the case began.

He also asked the court to allow the former NSA boss to report to the National Intelligence Bureau (NIB) office in Kumasi instead of Accra for the time being. Mr Assibey, as part of his initial bail condition, was to report to the NIB twice a month (First and third Wednesdays).

However, the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP), Yvonne Atakora Obuobisa, opposed the request, arguing that since the prosecution was being conducted in Accra, the accused should continue reporting to the NIB office in the capital.

The presiding judge, Justice Kizita Naa Koowa Quarshie, agreed with the prosecution and directed that Mr Assibey continue reporting to the NIB in Accra, noting that he would be present in the city during the trial.

The court subsequently fixed April 13, 2026, for the commencement of the trial.

Details of the amended charges

Prosecutors allege that Mr Assibey caused a financial loss of more than GHS431 million to the state through payments made to unverified individuals and non-existent national service personnel.

According to the amended charge sheet filed before the Accra High Court, the offences are said to have occurred between August 2021 and February 2025, during Mr Assibey’s tenure as Executive Director of the NSA.

Prosecutors said the improper payments were processed through the authority’s allowance payment system, which normally requires the preparation of a validated list of National Service Personnel (NSP) before submission to the Ghana Interbank Payment and Settlement Systems (GhIPSS) for disbursement into beneficiaries’ e-zwich accounts.

Investigators say the payments were made despite the individuals not being legitimate service personnel.

Vendors allegedly refunded Cash

Court documents also indicate that the NSA operates a “marketplace” platform, which allows service personnel to purchase goods or access loans from registered vendors, with repayments deducted from their monthly allowances.

However, investigators from the National Intelligence Bureau (NIB) say several vendors admitted during interrogation that they received payments from GhIPSS without providing any goods or services to service personnel.

According to prosecutors, the vendors allegedly refunded the monies in cash directly to Mr Assibey instead of the National Service Authority.

Secret E-Zwich card allegation

Investigations further revealed that in 2022, Mr Assibey allegedly obtained an e-zwich card linked to an NSA account at the Agricultural Development Bank (ADB).

The card, registered with his biometric details and in his name, was reportedly submitted to GhIPSS and used to receive funds meant for national service allowances.

Prosecutors say that between 2022 and 2024, a total of GH¢8,256,000 was transferred to the card.

According to the prosecution, Mr Assibey failed to disclose the existence of the card when handing over to his successor.

When initially questioned, he allegedly denied having the card. However, investigators reportedly discovered it in a bedside drawer during a search of his residence at Dome on March 25, 2025.

Kumawu farm project under scrutiny

The prosecution also raised concerns about payments linked to the Kumawu Farm Project, an initiative undertaken during Mr Assibey’s tenure.

Investigators say that between August 2022 and June 2024, about GH¢106 million was transferred from the NSA’s control account to a project account for the initiative.

Contracts were reportedly awarded for activities including land clearing and irrigation development, but investigators say the state did not receive value for the money spent.

Prosecutors estimate that the project caused an additional financial loss of about GH¢61,289,843.30 to the state.

Background

Mr Assibey’s trial over the alleged GH¢431 million loss forms part of a broader investigation into financial irregularities at the NSA. The Attorney-General’s office has now placed the total suspected losses at about GH¢2.2 billion, a significant increase from an earlier estimate of GH¢548 million.

The prosecution follows a 2025 investigation by The Fourth Estate, which uncovered widespread corruption within the NSA, including the padding of thousands of ghost names onto the Authority’s database.

The investigation alleged that the ghost names were used to manipulate postings and siphon billions of cedis in national service allowances.

Dubbed the NSS Scandal, the investigation also raised concerns about value for money, data security, and the integrity of the Centralised Service Management Platform, popularly known as the Metric App used to recruit and post service personnel.

Following the publication of the investigation, the Ministry of Youth Development and Empowerment suspended the Authority’s Central Management System, paving the way for a comprehensive technical and forensic audit.

A new digital platform was subsequently introduced.

The Office of the Attorney-General later launched an independent investigation, relying heavily on evidence uncovered by The Fourth Estate.

According to prosecutors, the findings confirmed widespread financial irregularities, with senior officials of the National Service Authority allegedly colluding with private vendors to defraud the state.

TAGGED:NSS Scandalosei assibey antwo
Share This Article
Facebook Whatsapp Whatsapp LinkedIn Telegram Email
Leave a comment Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

LATEST STORIES

Former government appointees under investigation, prosecution did not comply with asset declaration law
‘I never did this advert’, AI clones hijack Ghanaian identities for profit
Artificial Intelligence: Why African governments must adopt, adapt, and indigenise, but do not copy and past
CHRAJ sleeps on Songor Salt human rights abuses petition as victims cry for justice
“It’s deadly”: Violence and intimidation deter reporting on illegal mining

You Might Also Like

Uncover the stories that related to the post
Will African leaders follow Joe Biden's fight against corruption?
Anti-Corruption

Russia’s Oligarchs, Africa’s corrupt and Joe Biden’s war

Anti-Corruption

How a hotel was designated as 1D1F and granted $4 million tax exemption

Anti-Corruption

CHRAJ reveals staggering details in dismissed PPA boss’ cedi, dollar and euro accounts

Anti-Corruption

Scholarships bonanza: How some are struggling while others received double double

Journalism That Serves The People’s Interest

Sign up for The Fourth Estate’s newsletter and get our latest stories delivered straight to your inbox.

The Fourth Estate

The Fourth Estate is a non-profit, public interest and accountability investigative journalism project of the Media Foundation for West Africa (MFWA). Our aim is to promote independent and critical research-based journalism that holds those in power answerable to the people they govern.

Latest Stories

More trouble for former NSA Boss Osei Assibey as prosecution amends charge sheet to 21 counts
Former government appointees under investigation, prosecution did not comply with asset declaration law
‘I never did this advert’, AI clones hijack Ghanaian identities for profit
Artificial Intelligence: Why African governments must adopt, adapt, and indigenise, but do not copy and past

Quick Links

  • About The Fourth Estate
  • MFWA.org
  • Fact Check Ghana
  • Privacy & Terms

© 2025 | The Fourth Estate – A Project of the Media Foundation of West Africa